Iris Law is a Distinguished Finalist for the Snowbound Chapbook Award from Tupelo Press
Janine Oshiro wins Cades Literary Award
Congratulations Janine! More info here.
Join us May 6 for readings from the PSA Chapbook prizewinners!
| Join us to celebrate! Please join us Sunday, May 6 for the next installment of the Kundiman & Verlaine reading series as we celebrate our Kundiman fellows who have won the PSA Chapbook Prize! Hear their amazing poems and purchase their beautiful chapbooks! Feel free to spread the word and bring your friends & loved ones. We look forward to seeing your lovely faces! Kundiman & Verlaine present a night of poetry & libation with Hossannah Asuncion, Alison Roh Park, & Angela Veronica Wong Sunday, May 6 Reading begins at 5 pm Open Bar from 4 - 5 pm $5 suggested donation Verlaine 110 Rivington Street b/w Ludlow & Essex Sts. [ directions: F to Delancey or V to 2nd Ave. ] http://verlainenyc.com/ Readers' Bios Hossannah Asuncion grew up near the 710 freeway in  Los Angeles and currently lives near an F/G stop in Brooklyn. Her work  has been published by The Poetry Society of America, Tuesday; An Art Project, The Collagist, and other fine places. Alison Roh Park is a Kundiman fellow, Pushcart-nominated writer, and winner of the 2011 Poetry Society of America New York Chapbook Fellowship. Her work has appeared in several publications, including Mythium Literary Magazine and The NuyorAsian Anthology. She holds a Masters of Fine Arts in creative writing, and resides in her native Queens, New York with Kush. Angela Veronica Wong is the author of the full-length poetry collection how to survive a hotel fire available on Coconut Books. She lives in Manhattan and on the internet at www.angelaveronicawong.com | ||
| MISSION STATEMENT Kundiman is dedicated to the creation, cultivation and promotion of Asian American poetry. | ||
| This  event was funded in part by Poets & Writers, Inc. through public  funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. This  program is also made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts  with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State  Legislature and is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York  City Department of Cultural Affairs in Partnership with the City  Council as well as the Manhattan Borough President's Office and the  National Endowment for the Arts. | ||
Eugenia Leigh's first book, Blood, Sparrows and Sparrows, will be published by Four Way Books
Big congratulations Eugenia!!
Matthew Olzmann is a 2012 Joan Beebe Fellow at Warren Wilson College
Congratulations Matthew! More information here.
Join us March 24 in DC for Split This Rock: Advancing Justice
Advancing Justice with the Poetry of Witness and Community  Engagement: Kundiman’s Together We Are New York in Re-Envisioning 9/11
  
Featuring: April Naoko Heck, Eugenia Leigh, Zohra Saed, and Purvi Shah
Saturday, March 24
11:30 am - 1 pm
True Reformer, Board Room
1200 U Street NW, Washington, DC
For communities facing the aftermath of 9/11, poetry of witness is vital. In this roundtable, Kundiman poets examine how poetry rooted in Asian American community oral history can further social justice as well as community healing and transformation. The poets will share their work interviewing community members and producing poetry as part of Kundiman’s innovative 9/11 public arts project,Together We Are New York. This roundtable not only provides voices from poets within marginalized communities–Asian American, South Asian, and Muslim–but also demonstrates how poetry can be relevant to community members who may not even read poetry. This session provides a valuable lens for making poetry relevant through investigating how writing can engage history, community needs, and social justice.
This is a Split This Rock Poetry Festival event. You must be registered to attend.
Join us March 24 in DC for Split This Rock: Intersecting Lineages
Intersecting Lineages: a Solidarity Showcase of African  American and Asian American Poets
 Featuring: Kazim Ali, Ching-In Chen, Rio Cortez, Rachelle Cruz,  Monica  A. Hand, Alan King, Natasha Marin, Soham Patel, Kevin Simmonds
Saturday, March 24th 
9:30 - 11 am 
 True Reformer Building, Auditorium
 1200 U Street NW,  Washington, DC
 publicwelfare.org 
 
 Inspired by the  collaboration and mentorship between Cave Canem (an organization which  promotes African American poetry) and Kundiman (an organization which  promotes Asian American poetry), this reading features poets hailing  from these communities which will showcase the history of solidarity  amongst diverse communities.  Kazim Ali, Ching-In Chen, Rio Cortez,  Rachelle Cruz,  Monica A. Hand, Alan King, Natasha Marin, Soham Patel,  and Kevin Simmonds will begin by reading work by ancestor poets who are  considered outside of their self-identified community/-ities. Following  this, they will share their own work which highlights this kind of  productive hybrid fertilization, including inspiration taken from  various literary and other creative arts forms such as the zuihitsu,  neo-benshi and the theatrical jazz aesthetic. This reading highlights  the cultivation and growth which arises from the exchange between  African American and Asian American poets.
This is a Split This Rock Poetry  Festival event.  You must be registered  to attend.
  For more information, please  check out the Split  This Rock website here: http://www.splitthisrock.org/festival2012/festival2012.html
Eugenia Leigh is a 2012 Yale Series of Younger Poets Prize Finalist
March 13: Critical Consideration with TWANY Performance Excerpt!
Join Us and AALR to Respond to the Decade Since 9/11
Including Together We Are New York: A Polyphonic Performance of Poetry and Audio Clips
Featured poets: Marlon Esguerra, April Naoko Heck, Eugenia Leigh, Zohra Saed, and Purvi Shah
Tuesday, March 13, 6-8 p.m.
Roosevelt House
47-49 E. 65th St. (Between Park & Madison)
Manhattan, NY
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, BUT SEATING IS LIMITED
PLEASE RSVP TO 212.396.7946
For more details and program information, go to Kavad.

