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Jump Straight Up - by Jarold Ramsey (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Rushing in as a welcome surprise, these "new late poems" were mostly composed both late in the year and late in the author's years.
- Author(s): Jarold Ramsey
- 48 Pages
- Poetry, Subjects & Themes
Description
Book Synopsis
Rushing in as a welcome surprise, these "new late poems" were mostly composed both late in the year and late in the author's years. In Jump Straight Up, Jarold Ramsey versifies and pokes at an odd knot of themes: encroaching age overtaking a long wonderful marriage; the delights of grandparenthood; awareness of our "interspecies" situation in the everyday natural order; the blessings and challenges of Central Oregon's canyons, summits, and rangelands; and the intriguing ways the mostly horizontal left-to-right axis of our lives seems to shift in old age toward the vertical-"way down" (and out) but also "jump straight up" (in the imagination).
"Whether it's with elegies or tributes, Ramsey prompts us toward joy, urging us to jump straight up, / free of the gravity of time."
-Paulann Petersen, author of My Kindred
"Jump Straight Up is a buoyantly beautiful report from a Northwest master at age 85."-John Daniel, author of Gifted
"Ramsey delivers accounts of history, local lore, love for kinfolk, and yearning to understand the changes carrying us all along, richly in need of poems just like these."-Kim Stafford, author of Singer Come from Afar
Review Quotes
Early Praise:
-Paulann Petersen, author of My Kindred
Robert Frost remarked that a poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom. Jarold Ramsey's "new late poems" abound with both. Walk these pages and meet the Happy Boy, the granddad standing on his head, elegies to friends and peers, love poems of long marriage, an ode to Satchmo conceived on a treadmill, an Aeolian harp, a curious wolf spider, and a slime mold that talks. Jump Straight Up is a buoyantly beautiful report from a Northwest master at age 85.-John Daniel, author of Gifted and Lighted Distances: Four Seasons on Goodlow Rim
How often do you get to read poems firmly planted in a boyish elderhood, alive to past wonders yet rueful over losses rich and uncountable? This book delivers rich devotions to local antics and timeless questions, to natural wonders and human resonance with family neighbor, community character, companionable spider, meadowlark, coyote, amoeba. Long a student of story from Native myth to Shakespeare, Ramsey here delivers accounts of history, local lore, love for kinfolk, and yearning to understand the changes carrying us all along, richly in need of poems just like these.
-Kim Stafford, author of Singer Come from Afar