They Rise Like A Wave

They Rise Like a Wave

An Anthology of Asian American Women Poets

From the Introduction of They Rise Like a Wave:

At a time when institutional policies have sought to silence, marginalize, deport, or otherwise erase the existences of women of color, we have never been less silent. This anthology aims to spotlight the voices of Asian American women and non-binary poets writing through this moment. Our contributors range from established poets who are widely published, such as Marilyn Chin and Bhanu Kapil, to emerging voices such as Paul Tran, Hyejung Kook, and Monica Sok. We’ve chosen to foster a poetics of breaking boundaries, experimenting with language, and revitalizing a historically narrow and oppressive Western canon. At this time of reckoning and renewal, let us remember that poetry can be both a reflection of lived experience as well as a call to imagine how to build a better world.

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Coyote Logic

Lisa Dominguez Abraham

“Much like the mythological avatar responsible for scattering the stars helter-skelter across the sky, Lisa Abraham’s Coyote Logic pulls together seemingly disparate elements of her emotional universe into a mesmerizingly cohesive first book of poetry. Expertly balancing dream and reality, image and statement, these poems pull at the threads of survival woven into everything that makes us who we are. Coyote Logic is less a

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collection of poems and more a visceral collaboration of history, culture, fairy tale reimagining, and ethnography that track Abraham’s mapping of human existence.”

—Indigo Moor, Poet Laureate of Sacramento, CA

“Lisa Dominguez Abraham’s collection of poems, Coyote Logic, moves the reader from familiar place to place without seams. The movement of each line to the next mimics the movement of different people, especially women, especially descendants of brown immigrants – where the conjunction of one idea or location must find its dependent end, but like the stories from women and brown bodies: there are few maps. Abraham’s lines, “We who descend from refugees — / quick moves and no money,” are indicative of the kind of evasions our bodies are forced into, while her lines signal her privilege to look back and work towards creating new pathways to our collective story.”

—Rachelle Linda Escamilla, Author of Imaginary Animal

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Karst Mountains Will Bloom

The Collected Poems of Pos Moua

“In the lush panorama of these poems, Pos Moua intuits the body and the spirit’s deep yearning for home and heaven, for nature and desire, for mountains near and far, for a divine love surpassing this lifetime. At the core is an honest grief acknowledging that all beauty must eventually meet its own exquisite loss. Here is the gorgeous collection of a visionary Hmong poet

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whose radiant language and natural eloquence has given us the dark and light of his heartscape. For this, we offer admiration in return. We hold these poems close and know to remain hopeful.”

—Der Vang, Afterland, 2016 winner of the Walt Whitman Award

“To read Pos Moua’s poems is to be transformed. At their heart is a timeless wisdom and graceful clarity that poets rarely embody, but he does, poem after poem, from mountains to rivers, from Southeast Asia to California, from love to radiation, from this life to the next. With a personal essay by the poet and contributions from the vital and necessary Hmong American Writers’ Circle, this open-hearted book and the first collected poems from a Hmong American poet is a revelation that every person should read. Karst Mountains Will Bloom is a landmark achievement: ascendant, transcendent, visionary. This poet is a treasure and a light.”

—Lee Herrick, Fresno Poet Laureate, author of Scars and Flowers (2018)

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Mata Hari Blows A Kiss

Lisa Dominguez Abraham

Mata Hari Blows A Kiss

“These are poems that celebrate the many selves we contain within the body. Lush poems of lineage and what is passed down, along with poems of the heart’s incessant needing, this is a poetry made of wonder and acceptance. Here are poems of magic and sheer will.” —Ada Limon

Where the Torches are Burning

Pos Moua

Where the Torches Are Burning by Pos Moua

“The poet is a survivor, a lover, a young father. And he is an immigrant who has already made his own deep connection with the landscape. Pos Moua’s poems are at the beginning of a writing life of heart and craft, and they are intended for all of us.” —Gary Snyder

Blood Transparancies

Randy White

Blood Transparencies

Blood Transparencies: An Autobiography in Verse is a brutally honest narrative of coming-of-age in a unique American family. Told in a series of poetic vignettes, it details life with a father who believes John Muir’s words more essential than the Bible, often leading his ”tribe” on harsh

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quests into America’s wildernesses.

The tale is both humorous and heart breaking. Imagine Odysseus returned from WWII to teach his son the subtle art of bone breaking before sharing hot cocoa and opera. This is a family as at ease with nurturing abandoned wild animals as around a campfire rapt to ancestral stories of cannibalism. Throughout the book there is an occasional photographic relic, or Neolithic scrawl to memorialize the breadth of this human story. There are echoes here too, like the ”transparencies” of the title, of mythology and tall tales, an oral tradition transcendent of the printed page. Blood Transparencies is a stunningly fresh glance back, far back, from whence we’ve all come.

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Mad Cursive

Joshua McKinney

Mad Cursive

“The poems in Mad Cursive move gracefully between beauty and destruction, the essential real locale of poetry in our times. A mad swordsman inside a poet-seer, McKinney dares to locate what resembles, in my reading, spirit laid bare.

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In this truly elegant book, the remnant of our language negotiates a shadow world⁠—that space between life and death⁠—which is life on this earth. ‘Inside sword we find word,’ indeed. A truly courageous book.”

⁠—Claudia Keelan, author of Missing Her

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How Do I Begin?

A Hmong American Literary Anthology

How Do I Begin?

Hmong history and culture can be found in the form of oral stories, oral poetry, textile art, and music but there is no written account of Hmong life, by a Hmong hand, passed down through the centuries. As an undergraduate, Burlee Vang experienced this void when he received

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valuable advice from his English professor: “Write about your people. That story has not been told. If you don’t, who will?”  How Do I Begin? is the struggleto preserve on paper the Hmong American experience. In this anthology, readers will find elaborate soul-calling ceremonies, a woman questioning the seeming tyranny of her parents and future in-laws, the temptation of gangs and drugs, and the shame and embarrassment of being different in a culture that obsessively values homogeneity. Some pieces revisit the ghosts of war. Others lament the loss of a country. Many offer glimpses into intergenerational tensions exacerbated by the differences in Hmong and American culture.

How Do I Begin? signifies a turning point for the Hmong community, a group of people who have persevered through war, persecution, and exile. Transcending ethnic and geographic boundaries, it poignantly speaks of survival instead of defeat.

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Novice Mourner

Joshua McKinney

Novice Mourner

Winner of the Dorothy Brunsman poetry prize. “These handsomely-crafted poems are remarkable⁠—not only for their intelligence and use of language, but for their blend of sensitivity and strength. On his journey to recover the ‘lost child,’

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Joshua McKinney’s belief in innocence never wavers. At the same time, he gives dignity to boyhood’s time and place, and those who inhabit it…THE NOVICE MOURNER is an achievement in that it truly demonstrates how grief can give way to a celebration of life.”

⁠—Judith Minty

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Saunter

Joshua McKinney

Saunter

Joshua McKinney’s debut collection of poetry, Saunter, shows immense devotion to and passion for language in all its aspects. He intensely attends to words and delights in the play of accidental connections and complications. Such amusement and 

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playfulness with oppositions is evidenced in lines like: “an opening / a cello scales / some stairs. Risen, / a thought falls.” McKinney’s awareness of the complex resonance of literary history and current issues of language comes through in his dedication to making the appearance of language, not just its sound or its relative meaning, an integral aspect of his poems. Meanwhile, the subject matter is often surprisingly mythic and mysterious, championing absolute freedom and wildness. His intricate verse is sincere in its observations while turning inward on itself, sauntering in designed indirection.

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