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Rising Venus: Poems
 
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Rising Venus: Poems [Paperback]

Kelly Cherry (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 2002
With Rising Venus Kelly Cherry reveals the fearsome beauty, vulnerability, and complexity of women's experience. Cherry masterfully re-creates the full spectrum of the female psyche, from looming madness to harrowing self-knowledge made bearable, even exhilarating, through the poet's remarkable range and skill.

The book's journey is an ascension from mysterious and overwhelming depths of despair and anguish to a place of peace and perspective. Probing the emotional extremes of woman's life as daughter, mother, wife, lover, and working woman, poems like "Lady Macbeth on the Psych Ward" open a frightening chasm beneath the reader, yet steady and reassure with the bravura of poetic compression.

A passionate turbulence gives way to acute and delicate observations on art and myth and strikingly original insights into tradition and context. Thus, in "Sunrise," "A sky as blue as if it were/The backdrop for a Renaissance/View of the Ascension" becomes a representation of that miracle, itself figured by the miracle of dawn. The collection's title poem revises the classic view of Venus to speak of another miraculous ascension, a woman's hard-earned rise into her own sense of self: "Myth is the portal / through which we pass, / becoming human at last, / rising out of dream / and desire to realms / of reality, where love, / a woman, by Jove, / survives, strong and free, / engendering her own destiny."


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Though the likeable, troubling poems in her sixth collection demonstrate a considerable emotional range, Cherry is at her best and most memorable here when she writes about sex, loss and madness. "I want your needle stitching my wound. I want you to lick the end of my thread," she writes in "Needle and Thread." And though she's often associated with formalists like Henry Taylor, she's independent in her decision to balance a strong need to rhyme with a taste for irregular (and nuanced) meter. As with her last outing, 1999's Death and Transfiguration (also from LSU), there are occasional miscues: a section of poems inspired by artworks doesn't overcome literary deadweight; a powerful sequence about being left by a married lover hiccups on its references: "And this is as it was to be, Beethoven Knew that." As with most Southern gothics, what's most awkward also turns out to be most effective: "God knows how many sessions With the doctor, his unclean breath hot on My neck, haven't brought back The time I lost when the bottom of the grocery sack That is my mind fell out." And the gothic's cousin, the family romance ("Becoming My Mother," "The Final Visit with Her Brother"), requires from Cherry a plainspoken reserve that she hits perfectly, making this venus, on the whole, anything but retrograde. (Apr.) Forecast: Cherry made the cover of Poets & Writers a while back, and career-wise is ready for her national close-up. This book's emotional investment, technical savvy and self-deprecating wit would be a hit with women's book clubs that liked Mary Karr's memoirs or Kim Addonizio's tough-talking life-and-love verse narratives. While often regionalist in scope, LSU has the distribution in place for it to happen.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Cherry, an accomplished poet, fiction writer, memoirist, and essayist, draws readers deep into women's territory in her beautifully choreographed sixth collection. Writing from a woman's point of view in poems that are sometimes larky, always precise and stealthily powerful, she articulates various stages of a woman's coping with lost love, moving sure-footedly from witticisms to a joltingly candid depiction of depression and madness. Initially skeletal in form, her poems fill out and gain muscle, weight, and authority as heartache gives way to a renewed passion for life and faith in art. Here Venus rises not dewy and innocent but knowing, "strong and free," a triumphant vision of femaleness that Cherry bestows as a benediction in the glorious closing poem, "To a Young Woman." Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 72 pages
  • Publisher: Louisiana State Univ Pr (March 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 080712768X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807127681
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 5.5 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,473,559 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Kelly Cherry is the author of twenty books of fiction (long and short), poetry, memoir, essay, and criticism. She has also published eight chapbooks and translations of two classical dramas. Her most recent titles are The Woman Who: Stories, The Retreats of Thought: Poems, and Girl in a Library: On Women Writers & The Writing Life. Her fiction has appeared in Best American Short Stories, Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards, The Pushcart Prize, and New Stories from the South and has won three PEN/Syndicated Fiction awards. Her story collection The Society of Friends (which has nothing to do with the Society of Friends) received the Dictionary of Literary Biography Award for Short Fiction for the best collection published in 1999. For her poetry she received the Hanes Prize for a body of work. Her new and selected poems, titled Hazard and Prospect, was a finalist for the Poets' Award. Cherry says, "I write because I have ideas that can be realized only by writing. Luckily, I love to write. And I love the thought that somewhere there may be someone who reads my work and responds to the heart of what I write."

Another book of poems is scheduled for 2013. She is completing a new book of stories and working on a book-length poem. After that there will be another book of stories (the third in her trilogy of short story collections set in Madison, Wisconsin), a memoir, and a novel.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Poetry Collection I Can't Live Without, April 24, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Rising Venus: Poems (Paperback)
I LOVE this collection. Very few authors rival Cherry's ability to write about the experience of being a woman with humor, dignity, kindness, sadness, and truth.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Not up to par with her earlier work., July 7, 2005
This review is from: Rising Venus: Poems (Paperback)
Kelly Cherry, Rising Venus (Louisiana State University Press, 2002)

Kelly Cherry's fifth book of poetry is a decided step down from her previous work. Flashes of the brilliance that informed earlier collections are still here, but overall, this was something of a disappointment. There are full sections of the book that have a throwaway feel to them, as if the pieces therein were simply dashed off to have something to put into the book, rather than crafted with the usual care and skill. The meter and rhyme are often lost altogether, leading to rather uncomfortable places where rhyme and free verse mix with all the harmony of gasoline and styrofoam. Yet, still, the book does have its moments; the section of ekphrastic pieces, while some of its poems could have been trimmed (or omitted altogether, in one or two short cases), gives the reader some semblance of what Cherry can accomplish when she's really on her game.

Definitely not a good starting point with Cherry's work; get familiar with her through one of the earlier collections of poetry or one of the books of short stories instead.
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