Tripping the Light Ekphrastic

Poet Ronnie Hess is also an accomplished ballroom dancer, art connoisseur, journalist, and cook, so it makes sense that her chapbook springing from the visual arts in our lives should be titled Tripping the Light Ekphrastic and Other Inspirations. Emerging from these poems crafted in a variety of forms is a trenchant commentary on our culture and history. Expect to meet a knowledge-able mind, warm heart, inventive imagination, and an expressive twist!
— Robin Chapman, author of The Only Home We Know and Panic Season
Devotees of the well-made ekphrastic poem — a poem deeply immersed in the visual arts — are about to discover another expert practitioner. Ronnie Hess’ new poetry collection includes her takes on an impressive variety of paintings. Yet it’s the addition of Hess’s own layer of descriptive imagery that lifts these works of art to a new level, even beyond the boundaries of the canvas.
— Marilyn L. Taylor, Wisconsin Poet Laureate 2009-10, author of Outside the Frame: New and Selected Poems
Whether proposing a happier ending to Romeo and Julet, exposing a clownishly bad waiter, celebrating a loathed cockroach, or contemplating war and extinction, these poems embrace, with grace, tendernesss, and love, “this fractured terrified world.” Often inspired by paintings, the poems are themselves painterly, a poetry of exquisite sensory keenness, which fills the stories Hess tells simultaneiously with zest and sorrow, and makes us aware at even the simplest moments, of the eternal tug of war between life and death. If you want to be “dazzled, showered in rapure,” you need to go no further than this dazzling, rapturous book.
— Ronald Wallace, Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and author of numerous books of poetry, including, most recently, For a Limited Time Only
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Canoeing a River