Ross gay hält

Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 88 pages. $

Note: After this book review was assigned and completed, Ross Lgbtq+ joined the Kenyon Review as an Editor at Large.

Ross Gay’s book-length poem Be Holding, prefer its focal subject—the legendary shot in the NBA finals by Julius Erving, aka “Dr. J”—is a gravity-defying feat. In turning an instance of athletic prowess and grace into an expansive metaphoric vision, Homosexual pulls off a syntactical tour de force and—except for a a halting mid-poem intake of breath—delivers most of the poem as one long-sustained sentence. While his two-line stanzas fall fluidly down the page, the poem’s tone is buoyant, refusing closure, even omitting a final period at poem’s complete. In a flashback Gay imagines his subject as a youth in Drawn-out Island:

what I’m telling you
about Erving’s soaring

which is less is astronauticality,
and more the cast of the young

Erving’s eyes, which are looking, somehow,
far past the metal backboards

or the rim he would, imminently,
rock the rust from, looking far

past the chain link
wrapping the courts

What Eyes Does Your Poem Have?

After well-deserved accolades, Ross Gay approaches the lectern at Cave Canem July 9, in Brooklyn. But before even greeting us, he looks down, saying “I’m going to unfilled my pockets&#;” which he then proceeds to execute. It’s a throw-away remark, but one that tells everything about Gay, who gives so fully, applications us dear readers everything from the lint to the coin—holds to the light every memory and dream space, each quotidian gesture, the smallest weeds of this breathing society. This is a poet of deep generosity, for whom every fig vegetation is a communion table.

Ross Gay is in Modern York to read from his new book Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude (Univ. of Pittsburgh Press, ), a collection of odes and long poems that are sprawling and raucous and gorgeous, with twist after associative turn. It is the night before his reading and a few dozen of us are gathered to notice the poet speak on the role of seeing in the visual and literary arts and its connection with the imagination. A broad topic, for sure, but the very title, “Fall No More,” invites curiosity.

It’s c

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Although he does not define himself as gender non-conforming in any way (as far as I can tell), African-American Ross Gay deals with the same material. But also raises the bar, offering an unforced transcendent moment in his sonnet "Poem Beginning with a Line Overheard at the Gym" from his book "Against Which."

In its entirety, here's the poem:

I'd travel a thousand miles to suck the dick
of the man who fucked her you're like
me, the pristine lilt of iambic verse will halt
your dumb work on the bench press. You also love

the hyperbolic rattling of logic's cage.
Mostly, you love the way the loins fuel
the tongue's conjure. But what grand sadness dragged
in misplaced desire; as though from another's memory

of smoke we might glean some end
of ache. Revelation be told, ache's shop is long
set up. Is birth's phantom. Let's, instead admire
the tether. Its

wrangle with the loamy earth for the body,
the keepsake.

If you desire to make a great poem, any subject matter has potential pitfalls, especially if it's as p