For me, Michael Ryan's New and Collected Poems is an excellent read. Almost perfect. I was surprised to discover I enjoyed his earlier work more than his contemporary work, but I found pieces in both sections that I appreciated. I love Ryan's early style, notes of which I still see in the later poems -- a combination of familiar syntactical patterns with logically and linguistically strange imagery. We find this in "The Myth" (p.4): "Shouldn't we be ashamed?/ Isn't this history we imagine/ in that one's ugly movement/ of his arms? Her clumsy legs?" Structure works very well for many of Ryan's poems, in fact -- one of my favorite poems, "Death Watch," relies on it's very brilliant structure to build to an equal brilliant end.
I made a note, in reading Ryan's "Every Sunday" (pg131), wondering why must some writers be so helplessly cruel when they write about crazy people. I wonder this question often, given that I have lived all my life with severe mental illness. And also earlier in the same book, but decades before, Ryan writes, "Letters from an Institution," which may not have been compassionate, but was nuanced, thoughtful, maybe even empathetic in a certain spirit. Right up until the last line of the poem, that is, where he mention crazy again. So my question stands, but that does not mean I think you should read this book any less. Perhaps you should read it more, in fact.
I didn't favor Ryan's structured poems, such as "Milk the Mouse" (p51), as I thought Ryan's treatment of the restrictions let to clarity issues. But I truly enjoyed several of his poems. Many of them inspired my own work. I love the forceful, powerful tone and motion of "The Pure Loneliness" (p27). "First Exercise" (p77) is a supreme example of a narrative poem. There's too many to list.
Beautiful poetry in this collection. I love the variety represented by the different sections. My favorite pieces are the pieces mentioned in this review, and "God" (p125).
It's a good read, give it a look. Hope you find something in there!