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9 New Books We Recommend This WeekEnglish(English) Author Interview
The New York Times / December 20, 2018
Much of Yoon’s arresting debut memorializes the Korean “comfort women” who were forced into prostitution during World War II; it draws considerable power from the testimonies of actual survivors.“The book fixes attention on the conditions these women faced — injected with the arsenic compound salvarsan, offered anti-hemorrhagic agents made from corpses, left to die of infection,” our reviewer, BK Fischer, writes.
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OUR FAVORITE THINGS OF 2018: ASIAN AMERICAN EDITIONEnglish(English) Author Interview
hyphenmagazine / December 30, 2018
It has been a great year for Asian American poetry. Diana Khoi Nguyen’s Ghost of (Omnidawn) and Jenny Xie’s Eye Level (Graywolf), both gorgeous debuts I’ve been recommending to everyone, were finalists for the National Book Award for Poetry. Many more have been included on the year’s “Best Of” lists. There are so many books I loved that were released this year, but I’ve compiled a handful of my favorites. Happy Reading! Autobiography of Death by Kim Hyesoon (trans. By Don Mee Choi) (New Directions). Kim Hyesoon is a critically acclaimed Korean poet whose work has influenced younger generations of feminist writers in South Korea.The brilliant Don Mee Choi has been translating her work into English for years. In her translator’s note, Choi writes: “Each of the forty-nine poems in Autobiography of Death represents one of the forty-nine days during which the spirit roams about after death, before it enters the cycle of reincarnation.”She also writes that Kim wrote these poems because of the 250 high school students who died unjustly in the 2014 Sewol ferry disaster. These poems are utterly haunting and worth every moment you spend with them.
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Interview: Emily Jungmin Yoon on her debut poetry collection "A Cruelty Special to our Species"Author Interview
The Chicago Maroon / February 22, 2019
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20 inspiring new books to add to your reading list this monthEnglish(English) Author Interview
Today / March 20, 2019
The pair, who were featured on the 3rd hour of TODAY, shared their list of stories for March. Read on below for this month's picks
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Poet Emily Jungmin Yoon talks writing her new book and using poetry to keep forgotten history aliveEnglish(English) Author Interview
Hello Giggles / September 18, 2018
An introduction of Emily Jungmin Yoon's New Book
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EMILY JUNGMIN YOON EXPLORES TRAUMA ACROSS BORDERS AND GENERATIONSEnglish(English) Author Interview
Pacific Standard / September 27, 2018
An introduction of Emily Jungmin Yoon's New Book
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Poetry Challenge: Create A List Poem That Grapples With Rise Of Anti-Asian RacismEnglish(English) Author Interview
NPR / March 31, 2021
RACHEL MARTIN, HOST: I'm here with MORNING EDITION poet in residence Kwame Alexander. Hi, Kwame. KWAME ALEXANDER, BYLINE: Hey. Good morning, Rachel. MARTIN: Good morning. So we do this a lot, right? You and I turn to poetry and the written word in difficult times, and we have done that now for years. And here we are again in this place after the two mass shootings - one in Boulder, one in Atlanta - and what has been a steady rise in anti-Asian hate crimes.
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