Good Grief, the Ground
By (Author) Margaret Ray
Foreword by Stephanie Burt
BOA Editions, Limited
BOA Editions, Limited
12th July 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Paperback
104
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
Margaret Ray is pulling back the curtains on our societal performance of culture, guiding an exposing light to the daily performance that is life in a womans body.
Selected by Stephanie Burt as the winner of the A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize, Rays Good Grief, the Ground interrogates the everyday violences nonchalantly inflicted unto women through personal, political, and national lenses. Moving between adolescence and adulthood, Ray alternates between dark humor and heart-wrenching honesty to explore grief, anxiety, queer longing, girlhood, escape from an abusive relationship, and the dangers of lending language to a thing. With stunning wit and precision and attention, we see Ray show us what it is to be human: the mess of tenderness and darkness and animosity.
Out of the heavy Florida dusk, out of peach juice and late-night swimming pool break-ins and glances across grocery store aisles come these completely captivating poems. In the words of Stephanie Burt: Come and see. Take care. Dive in.
Its hard to stay present in this world: to stay not only alive but alertto the Florida thunder, to the waves and their corresponding particles, to the lumbering monsters of misgovernment in the cereal aisles, to fear and desire and patriarchys crossed wires, and to all the ways in which you and I, dear reader, can learn to stand up for ourselves, or even fight back. Its hard, but Margaret Rays first collection makes it happen. Show and tell, f/marry/bury, Cheez-its, Sweet Fears and advice from her younger self recur as Ray shows us through he and not only herworld in the American vernacular, the supple free verse, and the technical variety of this stunning, and scary, and honestly fun, collection. Come and see. Take care. Dive in.
Stephanie Burt, author of After Callimachus: Poems
This is a book full of heat. No, its full of sadness. Its rich with sensory pleasure. No, it struggles with absence, loss, diminishment. This is a good-humored, tender-hearted book. No, this book is full of edges. This is a book about change. This is a book about staying still. One of the great things about Rays lucid, supple narrative lyric poetry is the way it gets the many conflicting tones and emotions of life to co-exist and collaborate to make poems into stages on which all kinds of things can happen. I want to pour/my life into a different container,/but its still river water, one poem announces. Good Grief, the Ground feels both familiar and quite surprisingand isnt that what we are ultimately after, in poetry as in life
Daisy Fried, author of The Year the City Emptied
Margaret Ray grew up in Gainesville, Florida and holds an MFA from Warren Wilson College. A winner of the Third Coast Poetry Prize and a Chapbook Fellowship from the Poetry Society of America for her chapbook Superstitions of the Mid-Atlantic, her poems have appeared in Narrative, The Gettysburg Review, Threepenny Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. She teaches in New Jersey.