Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia, and Beyond edited by Tina Chang, Nathalie Handal, and Ravi Shankar
This powerful anthology compiles contemporary poetry from Asian and Middle Eastern poets, as well as poets living in the diaspora.
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Poems of the Masters: China’s Classic Anthology of T’Ang and Sung Dynasty Verse by Red Pine
For the past eight centuries Poems of the Masters has been China’s most studied and memorized collection of verse. This edition contains, for the first time in English, the complete text prepared by renowned translator Red Pine.
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The Veiled Suite: The Collected Poems by Agha Shahid Ali
Collecting together the life work of Kashmiri American poet Agha Shahid Ali, The Veiled Suite allows readers to witness the poet’s transition from the direct narratives of his earliest work to the passionate and layered lyrics of his later collections.
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Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities by Kazim Ali
The “lyric essays” in this book, part memoir and part travelogue, are deep investigations into the coming-of-age process.
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Some Say the Lark by Jennifer Chang
The ambitious and heartfelt second volume from Jennifer Chang gives many kinds of readers many ways in.
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Barbie Chang by Victoria Chang
Those amused, or shocked, by Victoria Chang’s The Boss (McSweeney’s, 2013)—an almost giddily unified book in which every poem used metaphors from an oppressive workplace—should like Chang’s Barbie Chang.
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Split by Cathy Linh Che
The title of Che’s debut collection, winner of the Kundiman Poetry Prize, suggests the original Greek meaning of the word trauma: wound, that which splits the mind or flesh.
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When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities by Chen Chen
The jubilantly titled debut from Chen Chen weaves together his complex narrative as an immigrant and a queer man.
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Juvenilia by Ken Chen
The 2009 winner of the annual Yale Younger Poets competition, Ken Chen’s Juvenilia features poems that are varied and anything but formally conventional, conveying a kaleidoscopic intelligence.
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The Morning News Is Exciting by Don Mee Choi
In this first book of poems, Don Mee Choi takes on a fearless exploration of self, family, community, and global identities.
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Toxic Flora by Kimiko Hahn
Fascinating facts about the natural world provide fertile ground for insights into human relationships in Kimiko Hahn’s eighth book of poems, Toxic Flora.
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Sorrows of the Warrior Class by Raza Ali Hasan
Changes in culture and government, in expectations, and in the built environment—during Hasan’s own youth, before he was born, and again “[s]ince 1979, the year of Bhutto’s hanging” run like ample cables through his poems of explanation, denunciation, exculpation, emigration and return.
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Killing Kanoko by Hiromi Itō
Killing Kanoko is a striking, important collection by a radical Japanese feminist poet essential to contemporary Japanese poetry.
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Time of Sky & Castles in the Air by Ayane Kawata
In this double volume of Kawata’s poetry, the language and experience of dreaming abounds.
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The Undressing by Li-Young Lee
Li-Young Lee’s fifth book of verse, The Undressing, unequivocally aims for passionate, pure, and enchanted speech, taking the lyric poem as more than a vessel for perfunctory, manufactured feeling; rather, the form serves the sentiment, as the emotions emerge from the urgency of their saying.
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Not Here by Hieu Minh Nguyen
Any reader who encounters Hieu Minh Nguyen’s second collection, Not Here, will likely be struck by the intense sense of longing and hunger that pulses at the center of his poems.
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Red Juice: Poems 1998–2008 by Hoa Nguyen
This volume collects work from the first decade of the poet’s prolific career, bringing together poems from two previous small-press collections (and several more chapbooks) to form a welcome archive of Nguyen’s voice.
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Contradictions in the Design by Matthew Olzmann
Olzmann’s new book, his second, finds its author fascinated by duplicates and by time.
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For Want of Water by Sasha Pimentel
Sasha Pimentel‘s For Want of Water (Beacon Press, 2017) was selected by Gregory Pardlo as a winner of the National Poetry Series.
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Diwata by Barbara Jane Reyes
In this series of mostly prose poems, Barbara Jane Reyes invokes creation stories from Genesis and from Tagalog tradition, creating a text that is a hybrid of Filipina and Western storytelling.
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Boneshepherds by Patrick Rosal
In Patrick Rosal’s third collection of poems, themes of violence and beauty often coincide within the narrative.
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So Much Synth by Brenda Shaughnessy
Re-creating, synthesizing (as it were) her youth and adulthood as Duran Duran and Simple Minds synthesized their catchiest melodies, Shaughnessy gains power as she modulates from memory into feminist argument, and then—in the last few poems—into speech as a responsible adult.
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Afterland by Mai Der Vang
The 2016 winner of the Walt Whitman Award, Afterland tells the personal story of Mai Der Vang’s family alongside the broader cultural story of the Hmong people and their exodus from Laos.
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Further Adventures in Monochrome by John Yau
In this substantial volume, Yau explores identity and personal mythology through various lenses.
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To Whitey and the Cracker Jack by HAUNTIE (May Yang)
This debut from HAUNTIE (the nom de plume of the Hmong American writer May Yang) puts its performance of outrage at center stage and justifies its stances thoroughly too.
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Blackacre by Monica Youn
Youn is a former lawyer and her book Blackacre is about an absence, ostensibly a hoped-for child, but also something yet more universal like a stake in the world or temperamental access to its richness.
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