Unearthed, Tracy Ryan's seventh full-length collection shows the poet at her mature and forensic best. Dominated by an elegiac sequence of poems for her Swiss-German first husband (from whom she was divorced and has since died), Unearthed unsparingly analyses Ryan's unresolved grief - and the ambivalent feelings that remain from an intense relationship. 'Now you are dead perhaps we can really talk,' she proposes in The 'Sleeper'. The final thirty pages of Unearthed offer a series of elegies for dead friends, some poems about her present family's joyous, if somewhat embattled, life on a 'Vegan Block' in rural Western Australia - and a couple of extended elegies, impressively translated from Lamartine and Rilke.
Tracy Ryan is a Western Australian poet and novelist. She was particularly well-known in the 1990s as a trailblazing feminist poet, with early collections as 'Killing Delilah' and 'Bluebeard in Drag'. Such poetry collections reflected the fraught nature of the the times regarding the end of second-wave feminism, through her experiences as poet, woman, mother, partner and the inhabitant of politicised body in a politicised space.
Ryan has worked various jobs in libraries, bookselling, editing, community journalism and university teaching. She has a BA in English from Curtin University, studied European languages at the University of Western Australia, and finished with a BA (Hons) in French from the University of New England in NSW. She is especially interested in foreign languages and the translation of poetry.
Ryan's poetry has been compared, by poet Dorothy Hewett, with Sylvia Plath, and Debra Zott, in her review of Hothouse, agrees, saying that "certainly, there are [in Ryan's poetry] the mythic underpinnings one finds in Plath's poetry, as well as that quality of imbuing the personal with highly dramatised mythic proportions" and that "it is no secret that Ryan has been influenced by Plath". However, she argues that "the very mention of Plath's name shapes, and threatens to place limits on, the reader's experience of Ryan's poetry", that "Tracy Ryan's poetry does not need the Plath myth to prop it up".
In 2001, Ryan said the following about her writing in a session with the Virginia G Piper Centre for Creative Writing:
I don’t adhere to any particular school of thought, except in the broadest sense that my writing is inextricably bound up with my feminism. This would be the only real connector between my books. I am interested in trying to find ways in which language may be interrupted, disrupted and rejigged for feminist purposes (among others). Usually this attempt would arise from something in either my personal life or the world around me. My home state is currently enacting a legal clamp-down on women, with regard to street prostitution—passing laws that restrict women’s movements and rights to occupy space. Though such factors are often what ‘provokes’ me into a poem, the poem equally draws life off other books (like most poets, I spend a lot of time reading). I work by a kind of principle of immersion in particular poets at particular times."
Notable awards and short-listings:
Western Australian Premier’s Book Award, Poetry (Shortlisted 2014)
I adored the first part of this collection, Karlsruhe, and marked nearly every poem in it as a favourite. Unfortunately, I found the second part of the collection Other Elegy didn't hit me in the feels as much as the first, and I lost that deep connection I was feeling in the first part. Despite that, I 100% recommend this collection to anyone who loves reading about grief and love and loss.