Rogan Kelly’s Demolition in the Tropics is a magnificent read – Within the book’s pages, one finds a world of love, gratitude, and beauty. Kelly observes subjects closely and with care. Rich in unique associations and original descriptions, Kelly’s prose poems show us the beauty in the everyday. Whether he describes stopping in at a diner for breakfast or completing his tasks for a job, the poet successfully encapsulates worlds within paragraphs. Though he is good at describing everyday events, Kelly’s work is anything but mundane. His poems are complex and evocative, and a superficial read will not be sufficient to understand the depth of the work. Upon close examination, the reader understands that although Kelly may be describing what appears to be ordinary, he understands that everyday moments simultaneously contain a multitude of possibility as well as nothingness. While being fully immersed in the text, the reader learns to appreciate the beauty in Kelly’s poems, but with poignant turns, Kelly cautions against trying to possess what is ephemeral.
Whether it is the wonder of a far away city like Alexandria, Egypt or the perfection of another person, Kelly examines the subject matter in his poems with a reverence that often eludes contemporary art, reminding the reader of greats like Dante or Petrach. Reading Demolition in the Tropics teaches us that wonder, love, and beauty surround us at all times if we only take the time to observe. At the same time, we are reminded that change is the only constant, which is why we must appreciate every moment. As a poet and reader, I highly recommend Demolition in the Tropics. It is a great study in writing, poetry, as well as the specific form of prose poetry. Demolition in the Tropics is available now through Seven Kitchen’s Press.
Rogan Kelly's poetry is the expression of a rare and profound sensibility. After I read his precious chapbook "Demolition in the tropics" he took the form, in my imagination, of a contemporary Knight ready to sacrifice his own life for the woman he loves. His heart not only keeps indelible memories vibrating with emotions, grief, fragility, loss, love, longing. It carefully keeps an ancient devotion to the feminine dimension, echoing the Middle Age lais and recalling an even more distant past, back to the Greek and Roman authors, that introduced the "lament of the shut door" into the literary world. Paraclausithyron (ancient greek: παρακλαυσίθυρον) "lament beside a door", from παρακλαίω (lament beside) , and θύρα (door), in both the Greek and Latin literatures was expressive of the lover's humbleness who suffers and cries for his lady, becoming his declaration of servitude. On the other hand Kelly's style carries with it an astonishing resemblance to F.S. Fitzgerald. His romanticism and struggle against all the odds that threat to harden his heart and his hope, make Rogan Kelly the Jay Gatsby of poetry. The special mixture of prose and poetry typical of Fitzgerald finds its renaissance in Kelly's prose-poems.