Advertisement

Synthesizing Gravity
by Kay Ryan
208 Pages · 2015 · 1 MB · 1,414 Downloads · New!
The “Synthesizing Gravity: Selected Prose” is a wonderful essay book. Kay Ryan is the author of this book. Ryan is a lifetime Californian whose honors include the Pulitzer Prize and the National Humanities Medal awarded by President Obama. She served two terms as U.A. Poet Laureate and is a former MacArthur Fellow. The author’s unique style and beautiful writing style are very evident throughout the reading. In this essay, Ryan writes her private previously unpublished soundings of poems. She is a kind of wisecracking philosopher, a quantum physicist of space who also clearly knows how clear voice sounds better than when alone.
Say Uncle
by Kay Ryan
None Pages · None · · 29 Downloads · New!
Filled with wry logic and a magical, unpredictable musicality, Kay Ryan's poems continue to generate excitement with their frequent appearances in The New Yorker and other leading periodicals. Say Uncle, Ryan's fifth collection, is filled with the same hidden connections, the same slyness and almost gleeful detachment that has delighted readers of her earlier books. Compact, searching, and oddly beautiful, these poems, in the words of Dana Gioia, "take the shape of an idea clarifying itself."
The Niagara River
by Kay Ryan
None Pages · None · · 36 Downloads · New!
In the citation accompanying Kay's recent award of the prestigious Ruth Lilly Prize, Christine Wiman wrote: "Kay Ryan can take any subject and make it her own. Her poems-which combine extreme concision and formal expertise with broad subjects and deep feeling-could never be mistaken for anyone else's. Her work has the kind of singularity and sustained integrity that are very, very rare…. It's always a dicey business predicting the literary future…[but] for this reader, these poems feel as if there were built to last, and…they have the passion, precision and sheer weirdness to do so."Salon compared the poems in Ryan's last collection to "Fabergé eggs, tiny, ingenious devices that inevitably conceal some hidden wonder." The exquisite poems in The Niagara River provide similarly hidden gems. Bafflingly effective, they seem too brief and blithe to pack so much wallop. Intense and relaxed at once, both buoyant and rueful, their singular music appeals to many people. Her poems, products of an immaculately off-kilter mind, have been featured everywhere from the Sunday funnies to New York subways to plaques at the zoo to the pages of The New Yorker.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement