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This entrancing second collection from Edward Ragg probes the complexity of contemporary China, from Beijing to Shanghai, through the dizzying landscapes of a country undergoing profound change.
Small miracles from distinctive voices
And Then the Rain Came–Edward Ragg
ISBN: 9781788641357
£9.99
Edward Ragg won the 2012 Cinnamon Press Poetry Award with his debut collection was A Force That Takes (2013). His second volume, Holding Unfailing (2017), charted the rise of modern China, whilst Exploring Rights (2020) confronted ‘post-truth’ culture and the prospects of humankind’s survival. And Then the Rain Came turns to love, physical and mental geographies, well-being and the vitality of the present. Set against the backdrops of the global pandemic and climate crisis, each poem embraces present perception in the awakening motif of rain.
Listen to two poems from And Then the Rain Came recorded at the online launch in April 2022:
At the Wedding of Water
Albaldah by Night
The manifestations and properties of water are excitingly explored in Edward Ragg’s new collection. Here are living poems where narrative and lyric work together to contemplate the energies implicit in water. The intriguing emphases laid upon the meanings of the word ‘present’ give a unique edge to the poems. Glass, tears, ice, rivers, wine, salinity, tides: all these elements are woven into the texture of this collection, where the illuminations and fluidities of language are beautifully captured.
Penelope Shuttle
In his latest volume Edward Ragg weaves together two deft poetic sequences as a tribute to the power of water and the yearning water can evoke. From the shadows of Durham Cathedral to the Chinese water-town of Tongli, water in this collection is the long-promised rain, the speckled pattern on a window and dew evaporating to a new day. Framed within the challenges of navigating the world in the Covid era, this is a book to read, keep and cherish.
David Tait
What are we to do about yearning?
Yearning, desire: which are not the same.
Yearning after desire. Rain spreads
across the windowpane. How many
hours have I lost to this? Another’s desire.
She feels for me in the Shanghai night
as I observe this Durham afternoon
feeling her. Nothing to be done:
which is not the same as doing nothing
or saying ‘We can do nothing, my love’.
We can. Rain percussive on tiles and panes.
Yearning is that desire which can
never be answered… Do not answer, love.
Nothing to be done. Love (persistently) quiet.
How the light rain of my desire falls all night.
Edward Ragg was born in Stockton-on-Tees in 1976 and since 2007 has lived in Beijing. He was a joint-winner of the 2012 Cinnamon Press Poetry Award and A Force That Takes was his first collection, followed by Holding Unfailing. and Exploring Rights. His poems have appeared in numerous international magazines and anthologies, including the 2014 Forward Book of Poetry (Faber & Faber, 2013), Lung Jazz: Young British Poets for Oxfam (Eyewear Publishing/Cinnamon Press, 2012), Jericho & Other Stories & Poems (Cinnamon Press, 2012) and New Poetries IV (Carcanet, 2007). He is also the author of a number of critical works and articles on wine. Edward is the co-founder of Dragon Phoenix Wine Consulting.
Exploring Rights — Edward Ragg
ISBN: 9781788640732
£9.99
Edward Ragg’s debut collection, A Force That Takes (2013), won the 2012 Cinnamon Press Poetry Award. His second volume, Holding Unfailing (2017), charted the transformations of a resurgent mainland China. Exploring Rights strikes new ground, exploratory and questioning of our roles and ethical choices, in a poetry that defiantly and playfully confronts ‘post-truth’ culture and the prospects of humankind’s survival.
The Price of Convenience
A crisp minus eight this Beijing morning,
changing lanes tattooed with skid marks
that paint an oily patina on subversive terrain.Pavement fragments under girths
of idling concrete trucks. Everything
sits on the precipice of bucklingunder its own pretext, steam billowing
from manholes that dot the lie of this
construction site’s unimaginable depths.I touch the accelerator and the obedient
bonnet speeds off assuming car-shaped
jets of a unique vapour. As if I really wasthe first aviator, falling in love with clouds.
Recalling all the air miles and flights
I’ve actually survived… And who isfunding this extravagance you,
rightly, ask? The giants of literature.Pausing to reflect on a commuter’s life
and where the last fifteen years
irrevocably went behind the wheel.Conceiving the life-toppling absurdity
of reciting this poem’s first steps sifted
from streets flecked with carbon-fibre and spit.The price of convenience is detection,
the analyst said and is correct, since,
now we’ve gone and written downthe whole sorry story, a confessional
of unimaginable subterranean depths,
smarting at the latest linguistic shiftwhen the news anchors joined
the military by identifying assets
on the ground, aerial or maritime,now I have returned to the correct exit,
aligning myself with precision and grace,
what is this, conveniently, if not a final word?
This is a complex and intently-reasoned collection which addresses historic and contemporary issues with unflinching attention. There is mordant wit, formidable energy, and a relish for analysis of various appetites. A prevailing and chilling concentration is sustained throughout. These poems witness the urgency of recording and understanding our past and present human darknesses.
Penelope Shuttle
Exploring Rights could not be more timely but is not only that: this book has the sustaining resonance of true works of art. This is formidably intelligent yet also tender and approachable poetry — a poetry of care, linguistic brio, philosophical range, sharp assessment, and occasionally savage indignation. Ragg modulates expertly between dispassionate attention and impassioned song. In Ragg — an Auden for our moment — delicate lyricism and discursive command co-exist. Exploring Rights registers our modernity and its human (and more-than-human) challenges, from Europe to China to the US to the Arctic. Ragg is a varied maker — a wizard of sampled documents, archival materials, legalese, spam, bots. Ranging from Catullus to Himmler to our era of surveillance, Ragg’s many-tongued verse shimmers with a complex intellectual and sensual music. Ragg tests his art on the most difficult yet urgent question: how and whether to pursue ‘the luxury of the poem’ in these days.
Maureen N. McLane
Edward Ragg was born in Stockton-on-Tees in 1976 and since 2007 has lived in Beijing. He was a joint-winner of the 2012 Cinnamon Press Poetry Award and A Force That Takes was his first collection, followed by Holding Unfailing. His poems have appeared in numerous international magazines and anthologies, including the 2014 Forward Book of Poetry (Faber & Faber, 2013), Lung Jazz: Young British Poets for Oxfam (Eyewear Publishing/Cinnamon Press, 2012), Jericho & Other Stories & Poems (Cinnamon Press, 2012) and New Poetries IV (Carcanet, 2007). He is also the author of a number of critical works and articles on wine. Edward is the co-founder of Dragon Phoenix Wine Consulting.
His most recent collection is And Then the Rain Came, (Spring 2022).