![]() ![]() Nor does he shy away from the reality of being black, that constant third rail embedded in our country’s history. He is mesmerized by the moment when the natural world meets the human eye, as when a praying mantis perches on an empty pint glass and transforms it into “a gorgeous transparent stage for this beast to perform on.” ![]() Gay leads us on a merry walk through the mundane, illuminating moments of his day with intense, exquisitely detailed observations: a morning stop at a fragrant bakery a glimpse of two strangers sharing their shopping bag handles a grateful kiss planted on a blooming flower in his garden. ![]() The result: 102 essays with curiosity-provoking titles like “Tomato on Board” and “Hole in the Head.” Gay writes, “y delight grows-much like love and joy-when I share it.” ![]() If timing is indeed everything, what better time than now, here in deep winter, to seek-and find-solace in the delightful but often elusive moments of the everyday? In The Book of Delights, poet and avid gardener Ross Gay sets out, beginning on his 42nd birthday, to write “a daily essay about something delightful” for one year. ![]()
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