Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 7 reviews on
David S. Wallace is a writer and editor.
I wrote about the fearless Alice Notley and her new book "For the Ride." https://t.co/a8ojgFAt6d
Notes on ‘For the Ride’ by Alice Notley | Poetry Foundation https://t.co/bMbOGhWR4E
The National Poetry Library is located on Level 5, Blue Side, Royal Festival Hall @southbankcentre. Opening hours: Tue 12-6pm, Wed-Sun, 12-8pm.
Tonight's the night! We're so excited that @alice_notley is travelling from Paris to read for us in the Level 5 Function Room @southbankcentre this evening! Final tickets left to hear Alice read from 'For the Ride' and hear her in conversation: https://t.co/230PNvIN0F
"With its mess of divergent voices, picture-poems, and eccentric locutions, [For the Ride] is baffling, beautiful, and always fascinatingly Notley . . . It's refreshing to read poetry so dedicated to its own ends . . . as long as conformity threatens, Notley will continue to push against it, or perhaps simply beyond it. Her work warns of the ways in which our civilization and its conventional stories have failed us, but it's also a reminder that the endless resources of language remain for those who have a little nerve." --David Wallace, The New Yorker
"Alice Notley's best work feels [...] intensely recursive, almost too good to read . . . There is joy throughout the book, in Notleyish lines like 'Stars look like the word stars, / really do ... and sparkle is better as its word.' I love that." --Elisa Gabbert, The New York Times Book Review
"[For the Ride] is both challenging and rewarding, punctuating a remarkably long and quietly rebellious poetic career with an ellipsis of sorts, as it gestures to what has come before it, while also erasing or replacing it . . . [Notley's poetry] leaves the reader not with a sense of discovery but of setting out on a search which each work refuses to end . . . The fact that the book is published at this particular historical moment means it will always remind us that, at best, we are 'not some parts', as the global dimensions of the pandemic highlight both human interconnectedness, and the ache of separation." --The Times Literary Supplement
"[For the Ride] is a postapocalyptic adventure into an unspecified future . . . [that] quickly accelerates into a trans-dimensional and gender-defying odyssey . . . A challenging, visionary work." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Alice Notley is a disobedient medium: the dead speak through her and she speaks back. Sometimes she's a poet of intimate address, sometimes of epic sweep. Notley's formal experiments allow us to make contact with poetry's originary and anarchic force." --Ben Lerner, National Book Award finalist and author of No Art
"[Notley's] effort pays off brilliantly. It's easy to feel the poet reaching ecstatically for whatever tool will express the radical moment: concrete poetic images, foreign languages, colloquialisms, and unexpected humor." --Booklist
"Written in a breathless e.e. cummings style, the poem fractures the rules of spelling, grammar, syntax, and formal poetry . . . it also brims with fresh, vibrant metaphors and irony, not the least being the religious innuendos that permeate the text. For sophisticated readers of poetry." --Library Journal