Andrew Rihn
Andrew Rihn is the author of numerous scholarly articles and chapbooks of poetry, including America Plops and Fizzes (sunnyoutside press, 2010) and Song of the Rescue (EMP Books, 2019). He writes a boxing column, The Pugilist, for Into the Void magazine. He was born in Canton, Ohio, where he still lives.
by Andrew Rihn
Press 53 Immersion Poetry Series
edited by Christopher Forrest
ISBN 978-1-950413-16-4
8 x 5.25 softcover, 98 pages
Revelation: An Apocalypse in Fifty-Eight Fights by Andrew Rihn uses 100-word prose poems to immerse us into the fifty-eight professional fights of Mike Tyson. The voice of an Old Testament prophet shines through the fight commentary, and relates Tyson to a modern-day Elijah—climbing the mountain to do battle, and climbing back down to a world of depression, anxiety, and alienating silence. Rihn’s poems are masterfully crafted, and his language is stunning in its elegance.
Tyson vs. Scaff
Dec 6, 1985
Felt Forum, New York City, New York, U.S.
The ring is a desert on smelted pillars where the devil is both loosed and contained. There is blood on the glove. Mike Tyson, thunderous and poised in the ring, remembers that soon he will have to climb back down again. The mountains of the poets shake and tremble and melt; apocalyptic mountains are spread with flesh. Salt and sulfur and sins like mist. Reflections of demons, echoed voices ricocheting off the backs of teeth. Every demon was once an angel, after all. Blessed opponent, salvage. This is how we think of the descent. This is also how we climb.
Praise for Revelation: An Apocalypse in Fifty-Eight Fights
Sonically powerful and careful in their word choice and imagery, these poems send readers careening into the storm that was Mike Tyson’s turbulent professional boxing career. Andrew Rihn’s Revelation: An Apocalypse in Fifty-Eight Fights captures the pathos of each and every Tyson bout. This collection of masterfully crafted poems will undoubtedly appeal to both pugilists and poets alike. Rihn’s poems, powerful and compact, mirror the fighting style of his muse.
—Todd Snyder, author of 12 Rounds in Lo’s Gym: Boxing and Manhood in Appalachia and Bundini: Don’t Believe the Hype
In prose poems shaped like the squared ring, Rihn offers a portrait of a complex, confounding figure. Here Mike Tyson is an “explosion posing as a man,” although he starts the book as a penitent: he “rushes over, palms up, as if almost to apologize.” Rihn’s concision creates his precision; in poems that are a tight amalgam of theology, biblical reference, and the detritus of violent sport, Rihn creates a fascinating new poetic myth.
—Nick Ripatrazone, Culture Editor of Image, and author of Longing for an Absent God
Andrew Rihn’s stunning Revelation: An Apocalypse in Fifty-Eight Fights is breathtaking in its power and vision. Both vivid portrait of Mike Tyson—man, myth, monster—and allegory of the human life cycle, Rihn’s collection is so biblical in its telling it will have you on your knees admitting the heavens. Because Revelation is beyond boxing, beyond blood. It’s Christ and His temptation, angels vs. demons, Zeus chaining tortured Prometheus—it’s the story of Man distilled to fifty-eight visceral, surgically rendered knockout blows in which “the ring is a desert on smelted pillars where the devil is both loosed and contained.”
—Philip Elliott, Editor in Chief of Into the Void and author of Nobody Move