Description
Ready or Not
by Robin Wright
$14.99, paper
978-1-64662-303-7
2020
Ready or Not explores life’s unexpected events through poems about relationships, love, loss, and death. It includes, “Like This,” a finalist in Poetry Matters Spring Robinson/Mahogany Red Literary Prize.
Robin Wright lives in Southern Indiana. Her work has appeared in Panoply, Black Bough Poetry, Spank the Carp, Rue Scribe, Terror House Magazine, Rune Bear, Another Way Round, Ariel Chart, Bindweed Magazine, Muddy River Poetry Review, and others. Two of her poems were published in the University of Southern Indiana’s 50th anniversary anthology, Time Present, Time Past. She had a poem nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Panoply.
Connie Stambush (verified owner) –
I am always searching to discover poetry that I can relate to, that takes me to deeper places, intellectually and emotionally. Robin Wright’s poetry does exactly that for me. She has a pure gift when pairing and evoking imagery and meaning that leaves readers awed as to how she did it. Her book, Ready or Not, will please poetry lovers and those who rarely read it.
Meg Freer (verified owner) –
There is not a lot of hope in these poems, but the characters cope as best they can, “ready or not”, in the face of break-ups, deaths, arguments and uncertainties and find small reasons to hope. These poems showcase the resilience of human nature, despite all the challenges at different stages of adult life. Robin Wright packs a lot of meaning into concise form, while still managing to include unique and important details and images.
Mare Leonard –
The first poem Fringe pulls us into the Midwest landscape of the 1970’s, a time and place that many readers will recognize, but if not, Wright brings it to life in a genuine and unassuming way.
A bar scene with the lyrics of Love Shack playing in the background might lead the reader to believe this is a start of a Netflix series because the poem moves along a sensuous narrative: a sexual scene, a marriage, a baby and a breakup. You might think it all sounds so familiar, but Wright’s language and pacing is fresh and seductive. Also, her connection with nature creates surprises for a world we usually ignore and stumble through. The reader will travel with Wright whether they are ready or not.
Wright offers a roller coaster ride into a world we know but not with the beauty of her Midwest landscape. Although she celebrates life, she does not ignore death and dying. What I love about Wright’s poetry is her ability to portray a world we seem to ignore or stumble through, showing us that whether we are ready or not, we have to endure the pain of life and the sorrow of death. The reader will be captivated by the freshness of her imagery and truth telling and the beauty, even in the world of dying.