![]() In a poem about a deceased friend, he admits, "I swore when I got into this poem I would convert/ this sorrow into some kind of honey." Gay is known for his exuberant live readings, and though these poems don't translate perfectly to the page, they're inspiring nonetheless. by Ross Gay Includes unlimited streaming via the Bandcamp app, plus download in mp3, FLAC and more. He assumes the presence of an "ancestor who loved you/ before she knew you." Gay's incessant positivity takes a toll even on him, as evidenced by his occasional lament that he can't actually feel gratitude about or make beauty from the worst things in life. In the poem, Gay uses multiple images that appear in other poems throughout the collection to create a collage. Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude is the penultimate poem in this award-winning collection. "I just want us to be friends now, forever./ Take this bowl of blackberries from the garden./ The sun has made them warm./ I picked them just for you." Gay welcomes readers into his garden%E2%80%94for playful strolls, for the work of pruning and harvesting%E2%80%94to bear witness to a mind working its hardest to appreciate the world. Ross Gay is a contemporary American poet, and Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, published in 2015, is his third full-length book of poetry. ![]() "I am grateful," he writes in the title poem. ![]() Fig trees are high on the list, along with friendship and the act of appreciation itself. Gay (Bringing the Shovel Down) drops a third collection that follows through on its title's promise: these simple, joyful poems read like a litany of what's good in the world. ![]()
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