Diana Khoi Nguyen is an American poet and multimedia artist. [1] Her first book, Ghost Of, was a finalist for The 2018 National Book Award for Poetry. [2] She is currently an Assistant Professor at the University of Pittsburgh. Her second book, Root Fractures, was released in 2024. [3]
Nguyen was born and raised in Los Angeles, and received her MFA from Columbia University. [4] She currently lives in Pittsburgh, where she is an assistant professor in Creative Writing at the University of Pittsburgh. [5]
She won the 92Y's Discovery / Boston Review 2017 Poetry Contest and the Omnidawn Open Book Contest. [1] She has received the Academy of American Poets University Prize, [4] as well as awards and scholarships from Key West Literary Seminars, Bread Loaf Writers Conference, Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, Community of Writers at Squaw Valley, and Bucknell University. [1] She is a Kundiman fellow. [6]
Ghost Of was a finalist for The National Book Award in Poetry in 2018. [2] In the foreword, Terrance Hayes called it a collection of “exile and elegy.” [7]
Nguyen says Ghost Of was written for everyone affected by the Vietnam War, including her family and her brother Oliver, who took his own life in 2014. [8] "Ghost Of seeks to understand his death, familial, transnational, and intergenerational trauma—all the silences and secrets. It is a radical eulogy for and to Oliver, because I wish I could still converse with my brother," Nguyen said in Literary Hub in 2018. [8]
Nguyen says she likes to write in intense 15-day bursts throughout the year, and that Ghost Of was written over just 30 days in 2016. [9]
Publishers' Weekly said of Ghost Of: "Though devastating, Nguyen’s impressive lyrico-visual rendering details survival despite overwhelming tragedy." [10] The Kenyon Review said: "Nguyen’s book feels populated not so much by 'experimental' poetry as by poetry that is shaped by suffering; the poems are the exact shape they have to be to accommodate, and attempt to bear, the weight of tragedy...One of the most compelling aspects about this elegy is the dispensation of melodrama that so often accompanies great pain. Nguyen’s book is a bare recounting of the experience of grief more than the circumstances that led to it. It reads like cartography, with the speaker mapping a territory that keeps reshaping itself. The poems are not attempts toward healing so much as attempts to be rigorously honest about the experience of trying to heal but failing, thinking one is healed only for the wound again to start oozing." [11] Booklist said in a review: "Haunting, incisive, and exceptionally spare, Nguyen’s shape-shifting poems confront death, displacement, and the emptiness within and around us." [12]
Alicia Suskin Ostriker is an American poet and scholar who writes Jewish feminist poetry. She was called "America's most fiercely honest poet" by Progressive. Additionally, she was one of the first women poets in America to write and publish poems discussing the topic of motherhood. In 2015, she was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. In 2018, she was named the New York State Poet Laureate.
Lynda Hull was an American poet. She had published two collections of poetry when she died in a car accident in 1994. A third, The Only World, was published posthumously by her husband, the poet David Wojahn, and was a finalist for the 1994 National Book Critics Circle Award. Collected Poems By Lynda Hull, was published in 2006.
Aimee Nezhukumatathil is an American poet and essayist. She currently serves as poetry editor of Sierra Magazine and as professor of English in the University of Mississippi's MFA program, where she previously was the John and Renee Grisham Writer-in-Residence in 2016-17. She has also taught at the Kundiman Retreat for Asian American writers. Nezhukumatathil draws upon her Filipina and Malayali Indian background to give her perspective on love, loss, and land. She lives in Oxford, Mississippi, with her husband, Dustin Parsons, and their two sons.
Mary Szybist is an American poet. She won the National Book Award for Poetry for her collection Incarnadine.
Jane Hirshfield is an American poet, essayist, and translator, known as 'one of American poetry's central spokespersons for the biosphere' and recognized as 'among the modern masters,' 'writing some of the most important poetry in the world today.' A 2019 elected member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, her books include numerous award-winning collections of her own poems, collections of essays, and edited and co-translated volumes of world writers from the deep past. Widely published in global newspapers and literary journals, her work has been translated into over fifteen languages.
Bob Hicok is an American poet.
Alice James Books is an American non-profit poetry press located in New Gloucester, Maine.
Robin Becker is an American poet, critic, feminist, and professor. She was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and is the author of seven collections of poetry, most recently, Tiger Heron and Domain of Perfect Affection. Her All-American Girl, won the 1996 Lambda Literary Award in Poetry. Becker earned a B.A. in 1973 and an M.A. from Boston University in 1976. She lives in Boalsburg, Pennsylvania and spends her summers in southern New Hampshire.
Kundiman is a nonprofit organization dedicated to writers and readers of Asian American literature. Among its services are readings, workshops, mentorship programs, writing intensives, as well as a poetry prize and an annual writing retreat, the Kundiman Retreat.
Ellen Bass is an American poet and author. She has won three Pushcart Prizes and a Lambda Literary Award for her 2002 book Mules of Love. She co-authored the 1991 child sexual abuse book The Courage to Heal. She received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2014 and was elected a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 2017. Bass has taught poetry at Pacific University and founded poetry programs for prison inmates.
Hieu Minh Nguyen is a Vietnamese-American poet based in Minneapolis. A graduate of the Warren Wilson College MFA Program, his writing has appeared in PBS NewsHour, POETRY magazine, BuzzFeed, Poetry London, Best American Poetry, The New York Times, Muzzle Magazine, The Paris-American, the Indiana Review, and more. He identifies as queer.
Jennifer Chang is an Asian American poet and scholar.
Janine Joseph is a Filipino-American poet and author.
Sally Wen Mao is an American poet. She won a 2017 Pushcart Prize.
Patrick Rosal is a Filipino American poet and essayist.
Matthew Olzmann is a poet, author, and essayist.
Root Fractures: Poems is a 2024 poetry collection by Diana Khoi Nguyen, published by Scribner. Nguyen's second poetry collection, it was one of Time's 100 must-reads for 2024.
Cindy Juyoung Ok is a Korean American poet, translator, and teacher. Her debut poetry collection, Ward Toward, was released in 2024 by Yale University Press for the Yale Series of Younger Poets. Her own poems have been published in Sewanee Review, New England Review, and others, and her translated poems by Kim Hyesoon have appeared in publications like the Paris Review. She has taught at Wellesley College and Kenyon College and is a professor at the University of California, Davis.
Ward Toward is a 2024 poetry collection by Cindy Juyoung Ok, published by Yale University Press. It was selected for the Yale Series of Younger Poets in 2023 by Rae Armantrout.
Shelley Wong is an American poet. In 2022, she released her debut poetry collection, As She Appears, after winning the YesYes Books Pamet River Prize in 2019, and her work has appeared in the Kenyon Review, the New England Review, and other publications. Her poetry has been supported by the Vermont Studio Center, the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Fire Island Artist Residency, the San Francisco Arts Commission, among others.
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