|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"The Hunger Wall" by James Ragan,
This review is from: The Hunger Wall: Poems (Paperback)
The poems in James Ragan's "The Hunger Wall" are reflective, mixing conscious memory with unconscious imagination. No other poet has so profoundly described the widening abyss between the rich and the poor that prompted both the 1992 Los Angeles riots (unfortunately mistaken by some with the 1965 Watts riots) and the split that occurred six months later between Slovakia and the Czech Republic. The various forms of oppression captured by Ragan's astute personal observations are deftly recreated by one who has been there. These poems are dry ice smoking from contact. Ragan chronicles the near-fatal death of the soul and its ultimate emergence.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hunger That Satisfies,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Hunger Wall: Poems (Paperback)
A deeply unsettling yet elegiac collection in symphonic form that explores concentric locations and the sense each have within the author, the reader, and the metaphysical space between both. A personal template for the poetic condition and ambitions therein. Ragan's wide travels and world-class accomplishments as a professor of letters are richly, lovingly documented here. Ratner's review is astonishingly obtuse in the matter of what constitutes 'poetry,' a brush-off as inaccurate as it is absurd
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
The Hunger Wall by James Ragan (Hardcover - October 26, 1995)
$17.00
In Stock | ||