An intimate and electrifying collection of essays from the New York Times bestselling author of The Book of Delights
In these gorgeously written and timely pieces, prizewinning poet and author Ross Gay considers the joy we incite when we care for each other, especially during life’s inevitable hardships. Throughout Inciting Joy, he explores how we can practice recognizing that connection, and also, crucially, how we expand it.
In “We Kin” he thinks about the garden (especially around August, when the zucchini and tomatoes come on) as a laboratory of mutual aid; in “Share Your Bucket” he explores skateboarding’s reclamation of public space; he considers the costs of masculinity in “Grief Suite”; and in “Through My Tears I Saw,” he recognizes what was healed in caring for his father as he was dying.
In an era when divisive voices take up so much air space, Inciting Joy offers a vital alternative: What might be possible if we turn our attention to what brings us together, to what we love? Full of energy, curiosity, and compassion, Inciting Joy is essential reading from one of our most brilliant writers.
Ross Gay is the author of Against Which, Bringing the Shovel Down, and Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Orion, the Sun, and elsewhere. He is an associate professor of poetry at Indiana University and teaches in Drew University’s low-residency MFA program in poetry. He also serves on the board of the Bloomington Community Orchard.
Turn on the television, listen to the news, current events. What do you find? Not many feel good stories to be had. Hard to find joy there, which is why, I grabbed this book. I also enjoy how this author writes. His prose is delightful.
Twelve stories that show it is possible to find joy if one looks. Even in the midst of crisis and he shows us where and how. In group activities, in talking, or listening instead of talking, sharing ideas. Joy is there if one only looks. This book is full of good things, something all of us could use.
The power of community and the healing abilities of positive growth and shared love. Inciting Joy is a collection of "feel good" that I think is the perfect balm for those struggling in these times.
Sense of joy: ★★★★★ Flow of stories: ★★★★ Writing style: ★★★★
There are some books that are both shockingly simple to describe and yet so vastly large they feel impossible to shrink down into the purposes of a review. Inciting Joy is one of those reads.
Ross Gay's essays in this collection all have a central theme—joy, of course—but each feels layered, framed through a different quirk of the lens, and reliant on different modes to convey their message. Joy, like all emotions, is a complex and ever-changing thing.
Growth and green things are a prominent note in this collection. Ideas of life and growing are no strangers to joy.
More surprising to some might be the inclusion of grief and exploration of loss as a means to receive the sharper, more poignant pieces of joy and uplifting emotional resonance.
Beautiful, sharp, soft, and layered, Inciting Joy is a unique thumbprint on a world that often focuses on the sharp and critical. Sit down with Ross Gay for a while and feel some love. It'll help... I promise.
Thank you to Algonquin Books for my copy in exchange for an honest review.
Gratitude, delight, and now joy. If Ross Gay spends the rest of his life writing about, cataloguing, reveling in, emotions...I will follow right along as he does so, and consider myself fortunate. These essays are longer than the small exercises in The Book of Delights, and I loved that. It gave him time to let a topic breathe, to meander around it, circle and expand his ideas in ways that I adored. It felt very much a companion to Hanif Abdurraqib's work. New life goal: See Hanif Abdurraqib and Ross Gay on a stage together, talking about their work. Book gods...make that happen?
Do you know the feeling when you come across a book at exactly the right time? If you have also found yourself feeling worn thin from the past few years, this book will be a balm. Having read and loved Gay's prior essay collection, The Book of Delights, I knew that he would not deal in platitudes. Instead, Gay offers a series of meditations on experiences and lenses to examine different aspects of joy. If you've already read The Book of Delights, you will recognize the thoughtful observations and celebration of the mundane and the minutiae which populate his newest collection of essays.
I was especially moved by his repeated return to community and connection as a site of care and a cornerstone of joy, through chapters on pickup basketball, gardening, and the Bloomington Community Orchard. I also appreciated the notion of joy as resistance against the abuses of power, as insurgency against mindless mandated conformity, as a refusal of that which will harm the community. The essay which analyzes Benito Cereno in the context of the abuses of the state is especially excellent.
Perhaps most compellingly, Gay deftly moves between the freedom in joy to the intimate relationship between joy and sorrow. Gay explores the latter relationship from multiple angles through the experience of the death of his father. I found these sections to be especially vulnerable and compassionate—solace I have been craving. It is a gorgeous read.
I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
I loved his last essay collection, The Book of Delights, so I was thrilled to receive this book. However, this did not incite any joy for me. It is getting rave reviews so I’m willing to admit I’m the problem. It’s me. Hi.
One of the worst books I have ever read. Rambling disjointed paragraphs with lengthy run on footnotes on every page. Nothing about this book incites joy. Half the time I didn’t even know what he was talking about.
I was very hopeful when asked to read Inciting Joy. I had not read anything by Ross Gay, and I was intrigued by the idea of a series of essays and I was in need of some heartwarming joy.
I did find an early essay about rekindling a relationship while caring for his sick father touching. Beyond that I struggled with the verbose writing style, and the intentionally bad ARC formatting did not help. Subsequently, I didn’t find a lot of joy in reading this book of essays. I am definitely an outlier reviewer on this book, but not every book is going to appeal to every reader.
I received an complimentary copy of this book from Algonquin Books in exchange for my honest review.
This book gave me a feeling that Gay describes "as thousands of birds taking flight in my chest, which means, I think, the long and beautiful breaking into something more than me."
I came across this book at the perfect time as I’ve been feeling a little burned out and this helped me invoke self-reflection. His collection of essays remind me to slow down, celebrate life, and remember that community and our connections with others is a cornerstone of joy
This is a series of essays, some of which I found more interesting than others. such as the one about gardening. However, there were extensive footnotes (some for a couple of pages) which disrupted the reading of the book and which I found distracting.
This book did nothing at all to ‘ incite joy’ for me . I found it to be a self indulgent set of very personal essays about Ross Gay’s life, his relationship with his father and his political views and experiences.
Indeed, for me the title of the book was ironic as it actually made me sad and depressed reading it . The book title suggests it might give helpful hints and incites as to how to create more joy in your life, and in turn, joy in those around you, but the book title is grossly misleading. It made me sad that Ross Gay seemed to be using the guise of supporting those (who by nature of reading this book might be feeling vulnerable and in need of support) to sell a book .
I love Ross Gay and his project of joy. This was a slightly disappointing follow-up to the very delightful Book of Delights, however. This collection is not as focused as that prior book. And in its format, I found the interruptions and long footnotes distracting, almost as if he could not bother to collect his thoughts and so had to insert many rejoinders and asides to bring it all together. The essay on football and masculinity was the best, in my opinion, and further cemented my strong belief that football is unethical and resoundingly bad for human beings (as players, as spectators, as a culture).
absolutely stunning. requires reading. never have i enjoyed or have been grateful for reading a book as slowly as i read this one.
i am at a loss for words, so i’ll share the last thing that moved me:
“and to whom, wherever you are, I offer a hearty thanks: grief is the metabolization of change. Perhaps it's for this reason that the bodies of the grieving so often actually transform in the process of grieving—losing or gaining weight, suddenly wrinkling or taking on a tremor, water running from the eyes, hair going gray or white, memory different, dying. It is an emotional and bodily process that calls to question the ridiculous notion that ever the two are not one. This alert to the body and mind being one and the same (which is also called the heart) is one of the wisdoms the griever offers us, though it is ancillary to, or a subsidiary of, what perhaps is the first wisdom of grief, the one they bring back to us like fire, like the tablets: everything is connected.”
Really liked the portrayal of growth in these essays that call on memories, self-reflection and regret to reveal the other side of the lighthearted Ross Gay we see in his poetry nowadays. It goes a long way to demonstrate, as he writes in one line in "Grief Suite", that compassion is a muscle; it develops from exercise—being in use. He is transparent about three catalysts in his life that especially moved me: 1) the long and ever-present journey of his father's death and dying, 2) his role as a scholarship athlete who played his way through college, and the toxic masculinity that shaped and suppressed his playing career, rooted in misogyny; and 3) reconciling his neglect to step forward to comfort a despairing acquaintance (and ex-teammate) when they reached out to him, despite his own similar experiences, shortly before dying by suicide.
He also calls on his experiences in relationship therapy and the ways he has learned to be in relationship to others. I also appreciated his chapter "Dispatch from the Ruins" on the freedoms we allow students when we remove the tradition of formal grading.
Every year in January or February, I read a book that I'm sure will be among my top 10 books for that year. I'm fairly sure that Inciting Joy is that book for 2023. I tried to slow down and savor Ross Gay's essays, but I started listening as soon as I downloaded the book and didn't want to put it down. Like any other book of essays, there were some that I didn't connect with as much as others, but that is because I don't have a lot of interest in skateboarding or basketball. But I listened to "Through My Tears I Saw" three times because this reflection on what was healed while caring for his father is one of the best I've read. In the remainder of the essays, Mr. Gay asks us to pay attention to what brings us together (like eating good food, dancing, and gardening) rather than focusing on our differences. Several reviewers have said they're not fond of the author's digressions, but I loved them as his curiosity always leads to more compelling writing about how joy is deepened by grief, fear, and loss.
On the whole an enjoyable and uplifting read. Gay is more political here than the title might suggest to you, which I appreciated but other readers may not. Genuinely lovely in many spots, but few that took me someplace I hadn't been or thought of before, and I did find those essays on subjects I haven't experienced (or at least not joyfully, aka sports) to be more difficult reads with less of a pay-off.
The essay on masculinity towards the end of the book is (in my highly subjective opinion as a woman) very worth reading on its own if you're not sure of the book as a whole.
What a beautiful book this is! Joy does not preclude sorrow or grief, but these are an integral part of joy. And these essays are so very full of all the feelings. I laughed, I cried, and thought hard about many things, and finished the book with a deep sense of joy.
Gay loves digressions, and I do too. There is one essay that has a 3-page footnote and this brought me great joy. The essays are lyrical and poetic, the language is often inventive. I recommend reading them slowly, wallowing in them, rolling around in them like a pig in the mud.
Gay is a true treasure. I will definitely be returning to these again and again.
This book is absolutely gorgeous and brilliant, one of my favorites of the year. Gay is a beautiful storyteller with so much poetic wisdom to offer, and with the ability to make you laugh, cry and reflect on your own life all in one page. I love the way he both humanizes the daily (sometimes mundane) parts of our lives while skillfully tying it to the bigger sociopolitical context.
“Though I didn’t yet have the words for it, plantings that orchard—by which I mean, you know this by now, joining my labor to the labor by which it came to be—reminded me, or illuminated for me, a matrix of connection, of care, that exists not only in the here and now, but comes to us from the past and extends forward into the future. A rhizomatic care I so often forget to notice I am every second in the midst of.”
i love u long, run on sentences i love you joy within grief, grief within joy, i love u gratitude as burning monsanto seeds/gratitude as resistance, i love u footnotes that become pages, i love u ross gay
I love Ross Gay. Your mother your cousin your neighbor would love Ross Gay! Not to make Grand Statements but I truly believe him to be one of the most important writers today + I am so thankful for his words always. Also made me cry about springtime in west philly
Energetic, lyrical writing that is both personal and political. I appreciated the sprawling sentences and multi-page footnotes. (I liked the fact that Gay was willing to break the rules in terms of what's expected and/or typical.)
i think the biggest take away, no matter how you go through life hardships, it even friends' or family members' hardship ...if you are one who help them, encourages them, etc. they will change your heart, your mind and move you in your daily life. out on October 25, 2022. i am happy i won it through Goodreads giveaway. Black & African American Biographies & Memoirs. essays (kindle and books). i did receive a book that was not in its "final state", which is fun, but you don't know that all you are reading is the final bit that all will see when they read it in October?? point being there will be no quote in this review, because you as i said you don't know what will be final. which is kind of poohie ... i love giving quotes when reading books similar in style to this ... i think something to learn if you have never been through a similar time in our daily life ...the point of when you lose something. no matter a friend, family member or pet. the dealing with loss is rough, it can rip you down right to a time when you might need outside advice or to maybe leaning on others to help ya through. depends on you and how you deal with such events in your life (daily life) i don't personally think that any such method is best ...if it works for you that is most important. find that happy medium and find 1's who you can lean upon and lift you up when you might need that encouragement and positivity. for myself ... i am thankful i have a family and loved ones to lift me up and encourage me ...as well as i can do a similar time for them. give and take. "naysayers" ("a person who criticizes, objects to, or opposes something") you gotta have a plan, i know sometimes u gotta wing it, but you need to have the guts to keep going if in your heart you know what you are doing is right??! don't allow others those "naysayers", to weigh you down. gorgeous book cover. i do believe that you can learn from others, when they might go through this or that ...it might help you. i know it is sad to think that due to their sad times you are encouraged but i do believe you get my point ...they might have a suggestion to keep you roaring on ... moving forward.