• The Trees Witness Everything

    The Trees Witness Everything

    Chang, Victoria

    In The Trees Witness Everything, Victoria Chang reinvigorates language by way of concentration, using constraint to illuminate and free the wild interior. Largely composed in various Japanese syllabic forms called “wakas,” each poem is shaped by pattern and count. This highly original work innovates inside the lineage of great poets including W.S. Merwin, whose poem titles are repurposed as frames and mirrors for the text, stitching past and present in complex dialogue. Chang depicts the smooth, melancholic isolation of the mind while reaching outward to name—with reverence, economy, and whimsy—the ache of wanting, the hawk and its shadow, our human urge to hide the minute beneath the light.

    Format: Book

    Availability: All copies in use

    View The Trees Witness Everything
  • Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced An Emergency

    Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced An Emergency

    Chen, Chen

    What happens when everything falls away, when those you call on in times of need are themselves calling out for rescue?

    Format: Book

    Availability: All copies in use

    View Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced An Emergency
  • When I Grow up I Want to Be A List of Further Possibilities

    When I Grow up I Want to Be A List of Further Possibilities

    Chen, Chen

    In this ferocious and tender debut, Chen Chen investigates inherited forms of love and family—the strained relationship between a mother and son, the cost of necessary goodbyes—all from Asian American, immigrant, and queer perspectives. Holding all accountable, this collection fully embraces the loss, grief, and abundant joy that come with charting one’s own path in identity, life, and love. (Publisher)

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View When I Grow up I Want to Be A List of Further Possibilities
  • DMZ Colony

    DMZ Colony

    Choi, Don Mee

    Woven from poems, prose, photographs, and drawings, Don Mee Choi's DMZ Colony is a tour de force of personal and political reckoning set over eight acts. Evincing the power of translation as a poetic device to navigate historical and linguistic borders, it explores Edward Said's notion of "the intertwined and overlapping histories" in regards to South Korea and the United States through innovative deployments of voice, story, and poetics. Like its sister book, Hardly War, it holds history accountable, its very presence a resistance to empire and a hope in humankind. (Publisher)

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View DMZ Colony
  • Soft Science

    Soft Science

    Choi, Franny

    Soft Science explores queer, Asian American femininity. A series of Turing Test-inspired poems grounds its exploration of questions not just of identity, but of consciousness―how to be tender and feeling and still survive a violent world filled with artificial intelligence and automation. We are dropped straight into the tangled intersections of technology, violence, erasure, agency, gender, and loneliness. (Publisher)

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View Soft Science
  • I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood

    I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood

    Clark, Tiana

    For prize-winning poet Tiana Clark, trees will never be just trees. They will also and always be a row of gallows from which Black bodies once swung. This is an image that she cannot escape, but one that she has learned to lean into as she delves into personal and public histories, explicating memories and muses around race, elegy, family, and faith by making and breaking forms as well as probing mythology, literary history, her own ancestry, and, yes, even Rihanna.

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood
  • Golden Ax

    Golden Ax

    Cortez, Rio

    From a visionary writer praised for her captivating work on Black history and experience, comes a poetry collection exploring personal, political, and artistic frontiers, journeying from her family's history as "Afropioneers" in the American West to shimmering glimpses of transcendent, liberated futures. In poems that range from wry, tongue-in-cheek observations about contemporary life to more nuanced meditations on her ancestors—some of the earliest Black pioneers to settle in the western United States after Reconstruction—Golden Ax invites readers to re-imagine the West, Black womanhood, and the legacies that shape and sustain the pursuit of freedom. (Publisher)

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View Golden Ax
  • Postcolonial Love Poem

    Postcolonial Love Poem

    Diaz, Natalie

    Postcolonial Love Poem is an anthem of desire against erasure. Natalie Diaz’s brilliant second collection demands that every body carried in its pages—bodies of language, land, rivers, suffering brothers, enemies, and lovers—be touched and held as beloveds.

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View Postcolonial Love Poem
  • Playlist for the Apocalypse

    Playlist for the Apocalypse

    Dove, Rita

    In her first volume of new poems in twelve years, Rita Dove investigates the vacillating moral compass guiding America's, and the world's, experiments in democracy. Whether depicting the first Jewish ghetto in sixteenth-century Venice or Black Lives Matter, this extraordinary poet never fails to connect history's grand exploits to the triumphs and tragedies of individual lives--the simmering resentment of an elevator operator, an octogenarian's exuberant mambo, the mordant humor of a philosophizing cricket. Audaciously playful yet grave, alternating poignant meditations on mortality and acerbic observations of injustice, Playlist for the Apocalypse takes us from the smallest moments of redemption to apocalyptic failures of the human soul"--.

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View Playlist for the Apocalypse
  • Girls That Never Die

    Girls That Never Die

    Elhillo, Safia

    In Girls That Never Die, award-winning poet Safia Elhillo reinvents the epic to explore Muslim girlhood and shame, the dangers of being a woman, and the myriad violences enacted and imagined against women's bodies. Drawing from her own life and family histories, as well as cultural myths and news stories about honor killings and genital mutilation, she interlaces the everyday traumas of growing up a girl under patriarchy with magical realist imaginings of rebellion, autonomy, and power.

    Format: Book

    Availability: Available

    View Girls That Never Die