
Late Summer Ode
Olena Kalytiak Davis
(Author)21,000+ Reviews
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Description
"The balance of rigidity, rhyme and ruin . . . makes an Olena Kalytiak Davis poem extraordinarily distinct. Even when she's alluding to Dante and Rilke and Chekhov, her voice is like no one else's."--New York Times, Editors Choice
In Late Summer Ode, Olena Kalytiak Davis writes from
a heightened state of ambivalence, perched between past and present tensions.
With Chekovian humor and metered pathos, from a garden in Anchorage not pining
for Brooklyn, these poems "self -protest, -process, -recede." Davis is a
conductor of sound and meaning, precise to the syllable: a commanding talent in
contemporary poetry.
Product Details
Publisher | Copper Canyon Press |
Publish Date | October 04, 2022 |
Pages | 136 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781556596476 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.0 X 0.5 inches | 0.5 pounds |
About the Author
A first-generation Ukrainian American, Olena Kalytiak Davis grew up in Detroit and was educated at Wayne State University, the University of Michigan Law School, and Vermont College. Davis's poetry collections include And Her Soul Out of Nothing (1997), selected by Rita Dove for the Brittingham Prize in Poetry, Shattered Sonnets, Love Cards, and Other Off and Back Handed Importunities (2003), On the Kitchen Table from Which Everything Has Been Hastily Removed (2009), and The Poem She Didn't Write and Other Poems (2014). Her approach to motherhood, intimacy, and small moments in life through sonnets and free verse captivates audiences and draws emotions with simple yet personal usage of words and language. Critic Dan Chiasson referred to Davis as "the rare poet who has made underproduction an aspect of her glamour."
Reviews
Praise for Late Summer Ode"As her fans know, Davis does not specialize in neat and tidy books. Some of her most memorable poems, such as "Francesca Says Too Much" and "Francesca Says More" and "Palimpsest," convey romantic attraction and abandon with a messy, you-are-there intimacy that seems to push written language beyond its usual borders and into the realm of sensation and sound. She delights in disorder, or she seems to, although when you pay close attention to her work, particularly her sonnets, you find a swing of metrical precision that calls to mind the Metaphysical and Cavalier poets of the 17th century. It's this balance of rigidity, rhyme and ruin that makes an Olena Kalytiak Davis poem extraordinarily distinct. . . . Davis keeps luring the reader back for a shot of her unmistakably vital flow. The energy of her work hasn't waned, and you have to wonder whether her poetry is less minor than she thinks. Out of the raw materials of a messy, overripe life there is still juice to be extracted -- or, as Davis puts it, still time 'to make something of what is. / then, of what is left.'"--Jeff Gordinier, New York Times
"The lavish latest from Davis delivers poems of spitfire erudition. The sonnet form, rambunctiously reimagined, continues to be the poet's favored, and few writing in English today do it as well as she: 'the right words in the right order/ by instinct if you're lucky.' With characteristically unfailing aim, the poet outsmarts her own expressions of dread, regret, nostalgia, and 'joie de death' 'Lo, even as I sat in my under/ wear in brooklyn, in sweat and exist/ ential angst on a friday night so hot/ so wrong.' In one poem, she writes herself off ('I pronounce/ me done AF'), and then ridicules her poetic virtuosity, 'so muscular your fucking sonnetry!' Among the book's many muses, Berrigan ('it all lies there inside-out-/ him') and Rilke are strong presences, as well as Keats, Bishop, and Kendrick Lamar. Letters to old lovers and recollected sexcapades interweave with poems about motherhood and the poet's two grown children ('six feet tall/ malnourished sugar addicted' and 'I/ bred and warned those would too soon replace me/ don't join any organized sport fuck crying/ think only what you think no sophistry'). Readers will revel in poems at once astringent and salacious."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Defined by contradiction and balanced between past and present, these poems explore selfhood and place."--Publishers Weekly
"In her fourth poetry collection, Olena Kalytiak Davis, of Anchorage and Brooklyn, New York, has established herself as a major American poet. . . . a great pleasure in the book comes from its lyrical artistry--the way the words play upon one another and the lines form patterns and disruptions of patterns"--Nancy Lord, Anchorage Daily News
Praise for Olena Kalytiak Davis"The effect is more like being an actor in a play, moved by the gusts of emotion that move your character, than like being a member of the audience. This discomfiting proximity, this unsought intimacy, is the fundamental pleasure of poetry. Davis's poems plunge us right into the heart of it." --The New Yorker
"As the work progresses, Davis toys with the notions of joy and sorrow, making both emotions newly understandable in the poet's unique worldview...Davis offers readers plenty to linger over." --Publishers Weekly "Olena Kalytiak Davis takes intimacy to task, exploring the sexual modality through a candid inner voice, unyielding in its dealings with humanity's need for connection... In Davis's poems, carnal knowledge has found its bone, exes mark the spot, and post-confessional meta-meditations ride the F train." --Boston Review "When a new poetry collection by Olena Kalytiak Davis drops, we expect a revolution...No other contemporary writer has pushed the relationship between poet, speaker, text, and body quite like Davis." --Green Mountain Review "Of course Davis has been compared to poets like Sylvia Plath or Anne Sexton for her wildness, for her unapologetic sexiness, for her metaphorical and rhythmic fortitude, but the comparison is unfair; Davis is neither of these poets. Instead, Olena K. Davis is of which the Plath and Sexton would've probably been jealous." --Poetry International
"The lavish latest from Davis delivers poems of spitfire erudition. The sonnet form, rambunctiously reimagined, continues to be the poet's favored, and few writing in English today do it as well as she: 'the right words in the right order/ by instinct if you're lucky.' With characteristically unfailing aim, the poet outsmarts her own expressions of dread, regret, nostalgia, and 'joie de death' 'Lo, even as I sat in my under/ wear in brooklyn, in sweat and exist/ ential angst on a friday night so hot/ so wrong.' In one poem, she writes herself off ('I pronounce/ me done AF'), and then ridicules her poetic virtuosity, 'so muscular your fucking sonnetry!' Among the book's many muses, Berrigan ('it all lies there inside-out-/ him') and Rilke are strong presences, as well as Keats, Bishop, and Kendrick Lamar. Letters to old lovers and recollected sexcapades interweave with poems about motherhood and the poet's two grown children ('six feet tall/ malnourished sugar addicted' and 'I/ bred and warned those would too soon replace me/ don't join any organized sport fuck crying/ think only what you think no sophistry'). Readers will revel in poems at once astringent and salacious."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Defined by contradiction and balanced between past and present, these poems explore selfhood and place."--Publishers Weekly
"In her fourth poetry collection, Olena Kalytiak Davis, of Anchorage and Brooklyn, New York, has established herself as a major American poet. . . . a great pleasure in the book comes from its lyrical artistry--the way the words play upon one another and the lines form patterns and disruptions of patterns"--Nancy Lord, Anchorage Daily News
Praise for Olena Kalytiak Davis"The effect is more like being an actor in a play, moved by the gusts of emotion that move your character, than like being a member of the audience. This discomfiting proximity, this unsought intimacy, is the fundamental pleasure of poetry. Davis's poems plunge us right into the heart of it." --The New Yorker
"As the work progresses, Davis toys with the notions of joy and sorrow, making both emotions newly understandable in the poet's unique worldview...Davis offers readers plenty to linger over." --Publishers Weekly "Olena Kalytiak Davis takes intimacy to task, exploring the sexual modality through a candid inner voice, unyielding in its dealings with humanity's need for connection... In Davis's poems, carnal knowledge has found its bone, exes mark the spot, and post-confessional meta-meditations ride the F train." --Boston Review "When a new poetry collection by Olena Kalytiak Davis drops, we expect a revolution...No other contemporary writer has pushed the relationship between poet, speaker, text, and body quite like Davis." --Green Mountain Review "Of course Davis has been compared to poets like Sylvia Plath or Anne Sexton for her wildness, for her unapologetic sexiness, for her metaphorical and rhythmic fortitude, but the comparison is unfair; Davis is neither of these poets. Instead, Olena K. Davis is of which the Plath and Sexton would've probably been jealous." --Poetry International
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