fellows

Henry W. Leung's Paradise Hunger, Winner of the 2012 Swan Scythe Press Poetry Chapbook Contest, Available Now

Congrats, dear Henry!

Paradise Hunger

By Henry W. Leung

Read an excerpt: “Tombsweeping Day

Praise for Paradise Hunger

“Exquisitely structured in elegiac lyric tapestries, Paradise Hunger ferries us into a luminous underworld filled with messages of grief and the promise of renewal. From Hawai‘i to Guangdong, Castro Valley to the Gobi Desert, Paradise Hunger maps the intricate geography of mourning, dazzling in its juxtaposition of sorrow and resilience.”

— Stephen Hong Sohn

“Abounding with melodious examples of the lyric narrative poem, Henry W. Leung’s chapbook traverses the experiences of immigration, seasons of loss and grief, and permutations of hunger. From classical mythology to Hawaiian legends, the languages and voices of “talkstory” in Paradise Hunger serve as a locus or guide across displacements of revolution, history, and memory. This is a rich collection to savor, line by line, as Leung muses on questions of home in stanzas eloquently laden with image and allusion: “You gave us peaches, our golden apples of Hera, our home myth. Peaches blooming only once each three thousand years.”

— Karen An-hwei Lee

“Paradise Hunger is a sweet peach that I don’t want to end, so I return to it over and over again. Each reading offers something new: sometimes I read it as an immigration story, then as a multigenerational narrative in which “The generations of migration flit / like hungry ghosts in search of graves…” Other times I read it as a chronicle of the Chinese experience in California. Then it becomes a ghost story, an elegy, a mythology, and an odyssey. Taking cues from masters as recent as Walcott and as far back as Milton and Homer, Henry W. Leung’s compact and multilayered collection—written to make language appear like new again—feels like an epic. I don’t know any other poet as young as Leung that has this level of skill and craft.”

— John Olivares Espinoza

About Henry W. Leung

Henry W. Leung was born in a village in Guangdong, China, and grew up in Honolulu and later in the San Francisco Bay Area. He earned his BA from Stanford and studied abroad at Peking, Cambridge, and Oxford Universities. Now he is a Kundiman Fellow and a Soros Fellow completing his MFA in Fiction at the University of Michigan, where he’ll continue as a Helen Zell Fellow. He has been a teacher in Hong Kong, a mentor/assistant at the Prague Summer Program, and a panelist at AWP. His prose and poetry have recently appeared in Boxcar, Cerise Press, CURA, Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine, Memoir (and), and ZYZZYVA. He has served as an editor for the Best American Nonrequired Reading and as a columnist for the Lantern Review.

http://www.swanscythe.com/books/paradise_hunger.html

More on Henry: http://stateofthebook.com/?p=562

Leah Silvieus' Poems in Current Issue of Diode

Read her poems here: http://www.diodepoetry.com/v5n3/content/silvieus_l.html

Born in Seoul, South Korea, and raised in the Mountain West, Leah Silvieus is a recipient of an Alfred Boas Poetry Prize from the Academy of American Poets as well as residencies from Kundiman and the Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation. Her work has been featured at the O, Miami Poetry Festival, and Asian American Women Artist Association and has appeared or is forthcoming in Asian American Poetry & WritingDiodeMelusine, The Monarch Review, Rock & Sling, and CaKe.

Congrats, dear Leah!

Neil Aitken Wins First Place in Beyond Baroque's Third Annual Poetry Contest

Congratulations, dear Neil!

Beyond Baroque Announces the Winners of its Third Annual Poetry Contest!
Now in it’s third year, the 2012 Beyond Baroque Poetry Contest was judged by Los Angeles poet, teacher and arts organizer, Ms. Suzanne Lummis. Over 800 entries were submitted, and this year the contest was open to poets nationwide, expanded from California poets only for the first two years. Winners receive cash prizes. The first place winner receives $1000, the second place winner receives $500, and the third place winner receives $250.

Mr. Neil Aitken, a resident of Los Angeles and founding editor of Boxcar Poetry Review, has won first place in Beyond Baroque's third annual poetry contest, and will receive $1,000 in prize money. 

Noted Los Angeles poet, and this year’s judge, Ms. Suzanne Lummis, said of Mr. Aitken’s winning poem, “Of all the entries, my first choice, "Vigil," was the one that struck that fine balance between clarity and mystery, simplicity, and shimmering depth. After I'd read it, it continued to echo in my imagination.”

http://www.beyondbaroque.org/

Jason Bayani's book Amulet is forthcoming in April 2013

Major congrats, Jason!


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Amulet By Jason Bayani

Jason Bayani, pulls at the threads of his culture and upbringing to deliver his most powerful collection of poems born out of an irreconcilable sense of home that exists on opposite ends of the Pacific. It is spun out of opposing forces; of the Filipino and the American; of the artist and the paycheck collector; of the clenched fist and the open hand; of one who embraces and embodies an inherited language, and knows only less of the one written on his skin. Bayani’s work pulls the reader in with writing that is empathic and brimming with a wide-eyed attachment to beauty that is painted from the guts, and then beckons you to take him up on the offer presented at the end of Broken Crown of Sonnets for the End of the World, “that you might remember me a place in this world.” Coming April 18, 2013