wbur.org
support wbur today!
Listen to this show
Poet Kay Ryan

Kay Ryan, 16th U.S. Poet Laureate. Photo: Library of Congress

Californian Kay Ryan will be the new poet laureate of the United States.

It’s a title that sounds very grand for a poet whose verse can be so compact and grounded.

But Kay Ryan’s ground goes deep. To fundamental questions of life, and how we live it — what we share and what we hold.

In her poem “The Well or the Cup,” she asks:

How can
you tell
at the start
what you
can give away
and what
you must hold
to your heart.
What is
the well
and what is
a cup. Some
people get
drunk up.

(”The Well or the Cup,” from “The Niagara River,” 2005.)

This hour, On Point: A conversation with the newly-named poet laureate of the United States, Kay Ryan.

-Tom Ashbrook

* * *

Guest:

Kay Ryan, joining us from San Francisco, has just been named the nation’s 16th Poet Laureate, and officially takes up her post in the fall. The author of six books of poetry, including “The Niagara River,” “Say Uncle,” and “Elephant Rocks,” she received the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from The Poetry Foundation in 2004.

* * *

Links:

Here are some of the poems Kay Ryan read for us during the show:

“Blandeur” (with audio, at The Poetry Foundation).

“A Cat/A Future” (and other poems, posted at The New York Times)

“The Niagara River” (with audio, at the Academy of American Poets)

“Dutch” (at the Library of Congress)

“The Fabric of Life” (at The Poetry Foundation)

You can read — and listen to — many more poems by Ryan at The Poetry Foundation and the Academy of American Poets.

 

Tags: ,

 
Share:
  • TwitThis
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • Live
  • Technorati
  • LinkedIn
  • Google
  • Furl
 
Leave a comment

We welcome comments from all of our listeners.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
These comments are moderated by On Point and WBUR.
This site supports Gravatars.

On Point Today
Recent Shows
Paul Krugman on the Crisis of ‘08
Monday, December 1, 2008 Paul Krugman

New York Times columnist, economist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman on the crisis of 2008 and what it’s going to take to dig ourselves out.

Comments [26]
 
Michael Palin (Rebroadcast)
Friday, November 28, 2008 Michael Palin

British actor Michael Palin on how Monty Python came to be.

Comments [3]
On Point Blog
The Party of Obama…
By Jack Beatty

Speaking to Tom in today’s second hour, Stanford historian David Kennedy noted that few would have predicted that the Democrats would nominate the nation’s first African-American president. The Democrats only “came over” on civil rights in the 1960s. The party of slavery before the Civil War, the Democrats espoused white supremacy after. Not one [...]

More » | Comments [2]
 
Listening back on the ‘08 campaign…
By Wen Stephenson

As you count down the hours to the end of this long, long election campaign, if you’re tired of staring at the endless polls and projection maps, here’s an excuse to give your eyeballs a rest and just use your ears for a while.
Clicking back through our ‘08 campaign archive just now, four shows leapt [...]

More »
 
Enemies Within…
By Wen Stephenson

Sure, there’s a Halloween sound to our second hour today — a conversation with historian John Demos about his new book, “The Enemy Within: 2,000 Years of Witch-Hunting in the Western World.” But it strikes a more profound theme than trick-or-treating, one that still resonates.
Demos himself puts it this way in the book’s prologue:
Witch-hunting, large [...]

More »