10 Books to Read This National Poetry Month 2021

10 Books to Read This National Poetry Month

For National Poetry Month, enjoy these ten books of poetry by Asian American poets, both Kundiman fellows and faculty. From the multimedia synthesis of Don Mee Choi’s DMZ Colony to the memory work of Diana Khoi Nguyen’s Ghost Of, contemporary Asian American poetry is emotionally resonant, genre-bending, and boundless. Asian American voices should be celebrated not only this month, but forever. You can buy these books here on bookshop.org.

 

Strip by Jessica Abughattas

Winner of the 2020 Etel Adnan Poetry Prize, Jessica Abughattas’s Strip is a captivating debut about desire and dispossession and that tireless poetic metaphor—the body. Audacious and clear-eyed, plainspoken and brassy, Abughattas’s poems are songs that break free from confinement as they span the globe from Hollywood to Palestine.

DMZ Colony by Don Mee Choi

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.


This is How The Bone Sings by W. Todd Kaneko

This Is How the Bone Sings is a book about silence. These poems are about Minidoka, the concentration camp built in Idaho for Japanese Americans during World War II, drawing from myth and folk tale to talk about the legacy of trauma across multiple generations in America.


Ghost Of by Diana Khoi Nguyen

Ghost Of elegizes a brother lost via suicide, is a mourning song for the idea of family, a family haunted by ghosts of war, trauma, and history. Nguyen’s debut is not an exorcism or un-haunting of that which haunts, but attuned attention, unidirectional reaching across time, space, and distance to reach loved ones, ancestors, and strangers. By working with, in, and around the photographs that her brother left behind (from which he cut himself out before his death), Nguyen wrestles with what remains: remnants of memory, physical voids, and her family captured around an empty space. Through lyric meditation, Nguyen seeks to bridge the realms of the living with the dead, the past with the present.

DĒMOS by Benjamín Naka-Hasebe Kingsley

The poems of Dēmos: An American Multitude seek answers in the Haudenosaunee story of The Lake and Her children; in the scope of a .243 aimed at a pregnant doe; in the Dōgen poem jotted on a napkin by his obaasan; in a flag burning in a church parking lot. Dēmos is a resonant proclamation of identity and endurance from one of the most intriguing new voices in American letters—a voice singing “long   on America      as One / body             but many parts.”


Hard Damage by Aria Aber

Hard Damage works to relentlessly interrogate the self and its shortcomings. In lyric and documentary poems and essayistic fragments, Aria Aber explores the historical and personal implications of Afghan American relations. Drawing on material dating back to the 1950s, she considers the consequences of these relations—in particular the funding of the Afghan mujahedeen, which led to the Taliban and modern-day Islamic terrorism—for her family and the world at large. Aber explores Rilke in the original German, the urban melancholia of city life, inherited trauma, and displacement on both linguistic and environmental levels, while employing surrealist and eerily domestic imagery.

Miracle Marks by Purvi Shah

Miracle Marks examines how women are marked and the marks women make by delving into what it means to be a woman and what it means to be. Drawing upon Hindu iconography, including the figures of Saraswati, Mirabai, and Maya — and through sound energy and use of white space — the poems mark the miracles of women’s labors, devotions, and survivals.


Locus by Jason Bayani

Jason Bayani’s second book of poems, Locus, centers the post-1965 Immigration Act Pilipinx in America. Weaving his way through the muddled recordings of history and personal memory, Bayani looks to tell a story of migrant bodies, the impermanence of home, and how one learns to find themself in the transient states of the experienced and mythologized America.


Bird of the Indian Subcontinent by Subhashini Kaligotla

The poems in this debut collection chart the passage of a metamorphosing self through euphoria, desire, despair, defiance, equanimity, grief, and loneliness. Appropriating freely from diverse poetic sources, the writer gives voice to a polyglot emotional range. Sanskrit poetics, Jazz lyrics, ekphrasis, the locutions of India's poet-saints, and the Anglo-American writing tradition all find place here. The book's chorus of figures—from Christ to Krishna to Caravaggio—move the reader between present and past, myth and history, bird and human, and across cities and continents.


The Twenty-Ninth Year by Hala Alyan

For Hala Alyan, twenty-nine is a year of transformation and upheaval, a year in which the past—memories of family members, old friends and past lovers, the heat of another land, another language, a different faith—winds itself around the present. Hala’s ever-shifting, subversive verse sifts together and through different forms of forced displacement and the tolls they take on mind and body. This collection summons breathtaking chaos, one that seeps into the bones of these odes, the shape of these elegies. A vivid catalog of heartache, loneliness, love and joy, The Twenty-Ninth Year is an education in looking for home and self in the space between disparate identities.

Kundiman Featured in Le Monde

Kundiman was covered in Le Monde's article "L'émergence des écrivains asiatiques-américains" on Asian American writers, featuring remarks by Cathy Linh Che and coverage of Ocean Vuong, K-Ming Chang, and Paisley Rekdal, among other writers.

The article, written by Clémentine Goldszal, traces the international success of contemporary Asian American writers, as well the impact of small poetry publishers as well as organizations supporting Asian American literature like the Asian American Writers' Workshop and Kundiman. You can read the article (in French) here.

March 2021 Kundiman Postcard Project

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Today is the first day of Kundiman’s annual Postcard Project with the Poetry Coalition! The Poetry Coalition is a national alliance made of more than 25 independent poetry organizations across the United States dedicated to working together to promote the value poets bring to our culture and lives. As a founding member of the Poetry Coalition, Kundiman presents programming on a theme of social importance each March. This year’s theme is “It is burning. / It is dreaming. / It is waking up.: Poetry & Environmental Justice.” The line of poetry is from Linda Hogan’s poem, “Map.”

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This year’s Kundiman Postcard Project will involve weekly prompts, helpful links, and lots of writing! Kundiman Fellows will be mailing one another one postcard poem each day while meditating on the theme of poetry and environmental justice. We hope to create a sense of community in these difficult times through the sending and receiving of physical mail. Join us by writing your own postcard poems and sending them to your loved ones! If you send a photo of your postcard(s) to julia@kundiman.org or tweet us @kundimanforever, we’d love to feature your postcard on our social media and in our web archive. Make sure to use the Poetry Coalition hashtags #EnvironmentalJustice and #PoetryCoalition, as well as our hashtag #KundimanPostcards!

Check out the recap of last year’s Postcard Project and 2019’s Postcard Project.

Stay tuned for our weekly prompts, which we’ll tweet out and share so that you can follow along!

Week 1

Prompts:

  1. What stands out to you as sacred in your corner of the world? If you can, take a walk around your neighborhood, and write down the first five things you notice. See how many of them you can fit into a poem! 

  2. Linda Hogan writes in "Map": "This is what I know from blood: / the first language is not our own." In the language that feels most like your own, think of two or three words that describe your favorite outdoor setting. Write a poem about how it feels to be in this setting and describe it using the words you thought of!  

  3. Environmental justice teaches us that all communities deserve equal protection from environmental harm. It's hard to not think of the power outage in Texas, and how mutual aid organizations have been providing vital support. What does mutual aid mean to you? How have you seen it in action in communities? Write a poem about a specific moment of aid and care.

Suggested reading & links:

  1. The Principles of Environmental Justice, drafted by Delegates to the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit held in October, 1991. 

  2. To Survive Climate Catastrophe, Look to Queer and Disabled Folks by Patty Berne & Vanessa Raditz 

  3. A directory of mutual aid organizations in Texas. Please share, donate, and help however you can!

Week 2

Prompts:

  1. Do you have a favorite love poem that you could rewrite, but to an element in nature? Craig Santos Perez's poem Love in a Time of Climate Change recycles Pablo Neruda's "Sonnet XVII". He writes, "I love you without knowing how or when this world / will end." What do you love, without knowing when this world will end?

  2. When disaster comes, what do you imagine yourself doing? What will you miss the most? In "How to Let Go of the World" Franny Choi writes, "When disaster comes, some of us will stand on the rooftop to address the ghosts. / Some of us will hold the line." Write a poem that describes what would be most important to you, if the world were to end! 

  3. What changes would make the planet more sustainable? If you could change anything about the world as it is right now, what would you change? Pick one example (place, person, idea) and write about how that change would show up in the world around you. 

Suggested reading & links: 

  1. Unequal Impact: The Deep Links Between Racism and Climate Change, an interview with climate activist Elizabeth Yeampierre.

  2. Here is a linocut art print by organizer/activist Annie Morgan Banks to inspire some drawings, if you're so inclined!

WEEK 3

Prompts:

  1. How can we practice mindfulness and care in the face of environmental change? Fatimah Asghar writes in I Don’t Know What Will Kill Us First: The Race War or What We've Done to the Earth, "behind / your head a butterfly rests on a tree; it’s been / there our whole conversation". Write a poem about the spaces and moments that offer you a sense of stillness and peace. 

  2. Imagine an animal visits you while out in nature—where would it take you? Jane Wong writes in This is What Survival Looks Like, "What if I had / climbed up there with them, my striped / tail a broom sweeping rage clean?" Write a poem about this encounter! 

  3. If you could speak to your ancestors about their relationship with nature, what would they share with you? What might you want to ask them? Write a poem about what this conversation might look like.

suggested reading & links:

  1. Decolonizing Environmentalism by Jazmin Murphy 

  2. These soothing watercolor paintings from Satsuki Shibuya might inspire your own abstract art!

Week 4

Prompts:

  1. Write a poem that dreams of a world where climate change has been solved, or healed. What does this world look like? Who is responsible for the healing? 

  2. If humans had to move to another planet to survive, what world would we migrate to? What animals, plants, or creatures would we find there? What systems would we live in? 

  3. Use this line from Li-Young Lee to begin your postcard poem, "From blossoms comes—". What do flower blossoms create for you? Seeds, fruits—maybe a memory, or an emotion? 

    Lee writes, "From blossoms comes / this brown paper bag of peaches...There are days we live / as if death were nowhere / in the background; from joy / to joy to joy, / from wing to wing, / from blossom to blossom to / impossible blossom, to sweet impossible blossom." 

Suggested reading & links: 

  1. "Redshift and Portalmetal," by micha cárdenas, an electronic literature piece that uses space travel to look at the experience of migration for a trans woman of color—shared by Ching-In Chen.

  2. Radical and hopeful art by Chiara Acu.

Week 5

Prompt:

  1. Where is your absolute favorite place in the world? Imagine yourself walking through a doorway that magically transports you to this place—what do you feel when you are there? Who do you wish could be there with you? Why is this your favorite place? Write a poem that describes two specific elements in this environment and why they are important to you!

Grab a (Digital) Copy of the Kundiman South Food Zine

In an effort to bring this expansive community closer during this isolating time, Kundiman South co-chairs Onyew Kim and Angela So organized and created a Food Zine full of writings, recipes, and doodles from our Fellows! In Onyew's and Angela's own words:

The American South has such a rich food history that to know the South is to know its cuisines and all the mixtures of cultures that made it what it is. The same goes for Asian food. We share so much between ouro cultures and to bring all that culinary history to the American South truly creates something both unique and familiar.

You can access a digital version of Kundiman South's lovely Food Zine here.

Thank you to all our contributors! Vidhu Aggarwal, Tamra Al-Wuasi-Coleman, Marci Calabretta Cancio-Bello, Ina Cariño, Min Kang Hsiao, Onyew Kim, Wihro Kim, Stephanie Kong, April Lim, Alinda Mac, Kirtan Nautiyal, Chaya Nautiyal Murali, Yoon Nam, Tiana Nobile, Joshua Nguyen, Dianna Settles, Jenny Shin, Katie Shin, and Angela So.

This program is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.