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Nanci Lee’s debut explores 4th Century Su Hui’s palindrome of longing. Hsin arises from an ancient Chinese ethical philosophy, less a set of moral standards than an appeal to tune.
Heart-mind and nothingness are fair English translations of Hsin, but their tidiness risks losing some of the sharper, wider sides of absence and appetite. As a historical process, according to Hang Thaddeus T’ui-Chieh, Hsin frustrates, “the psychological fragmentation and compartmentalization of the West.”
Born to a Syrian father and a Chinese mother, who gave her up for adoption, Lee explores her origins in a compendium of poem fragments where form embraces the process of its unfolding. These are Koan-like poems, resonant with tones at turns ageless and contemporary; Hsin holds silence in ways that both claim and keep at bay.
“In Hsin, Nanci Lee operates on a high frequency of language and ideas, a booksong of grief and celebration. In these poems, there is a straight-talking glamour that delights and surprises the reader…”–Alice Burdick, author of Book of Short Sentences and Holler
88 Pages
8.5in * 5.75in * 0.26in
0.175lb
April 15, 2022
CA
9781771315722
eng
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