<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This National Poetry Series winner is a seriously playful tour de force of imaginative language.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>"A fine-grained light like that of a nineteenth-century Danish landscape painting shimmers throughout these gorgeously tactile and tactful poems."--John Ashbery</p><p>"A heady heady brew--O'Hara conversation, Ashbery sophistication, Koch hilarity, Schuyler shapeliness, Guest adventures, Notley grain, Mayer utopia, Padgett whimsy, Oulipo oofs."--Bob Holman, National Poetry Series judge</p><p>Mlinko was hailed by <i>Publishers Weekly</i> as "one of the most exciting American poets under 40." Her <i>Starred Wire</i> reaches across continents of language where, as in Borges, dream logic dictates an interactive, delirious exploration of art and childhood, place and possibility.</p><p>Author of <i>Matinées</i>, <b>Ange Mlinko</b> lives in Brooklyn with her husband and young son.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>". . . [Phi's] irreverent profundity shines in prose poems and fixed forms alike." <em><strong>--New York Times Book Review</strong></em></p> <p>"The strength of this book comes from the clear and forceful voice. The words leap off the pages, half alive already . . . <em>Thousand Star Hotel</em> is a fierce, burning indictment of racism and xenophobia." <em><strong>--Chicago Review of Books, </strong></em><strong>"'Thousand Star Hotel' Is A Fierce, Burning Indictment: Bao Phi's second poetry collection confronts racism in the U.S." review</strong></p> <p>"<em>Thousand Star Hotel</em> is a cutting collection of poems about growing up a refugee, becoming a father, feeling surrounded by police brutality and the invisibility of poor Asian-Americans." <em><strong>--NPR Code Switch, </strong></em><strong>"The Poet Bao Phi, On Creating A 'Guidebook' For Young Asian-Americans" interview</strong></p> <p>"Much more than a set of poems, [<em>Thousand Star Hotel</em>] is its own history: a chronicle of Phi's family, present, past and future. Spinning this history together from fragments of memory and reflection, the collection provides a critical thread in the fabric of Asian American literature, history, and activism--past and present." <em><strong>--Kartika Review</strong></em></p> <p>"There's sparkling range within these poems, and the reach is fluid... [Phi] takes disparate and precise moments of family, work, fatherhood, and shows their wider echo." <em><strong>--The Millions, </strong></em><strong> "Must-Read Poetry: July 2017"</strong></p> <p>". . . [Phi's] fluid, open writing is frequently shot through with moments of lyricism . . . Accessible, accomplished, and troubling, this should intrigue many readers." <strong><em>--Library Journal, </em> "Poetry Beyond the Basics: Twelve New Collections Offer Fresh Perspective on the Human Experience"</strong></p> <p>"...<em>Thousand Star Hotel </em>skillfully weaves a range of topics -- police brutality, Asian American representation, masculinity, fatherhood, and his immigrant experience growing up in Minnesota, to name just a few." <em><strong>--Angry Asian Man, </strong></em><strong> "Trust the Process: An Interview with Poet Bao Phi"</strong></p> <p>"The many fans of Bao Phi will be thrilled by this book. New readers will be seduced by his trademark blend of passion, politics, and poetry. His poems alternate between the profane and the provocative as they deal with war and history, love and heartbreak, the inner city and the inner self. A powerful read, a gutsy writer." --<strong>Viet Thanh Nguyen</strong></p> <p>"A beautiful collection of passionate poems that explores the deep-seated trauma and discrimination in an Asian-American life." <em><strong>--Sonder: A Blog of Seattle Arts & Lectures, </strong></em><strong>"Summer Book Bingo: Recommended by an Independent Bookseller"</strong></p> <p>"<em>[Thousand Star Hotel]</em> is bold in its language for experiences that oscillate between existence and erasure, and it is moving in its mission to challenge the boundaries of solidarity and to refuse neat conceptions of past, present and future." <em><strong>--The Writers' Block Blog, </strong></em><strong>interview</strong></p> <p>"Bao Phi's <em>Thousand Star Hotel</em> is a vividly inward look at an Asian American experience that never flinches from the hard realizations of humanity. Bao ties generations together at his personal crossroad of fatherhood and lets the reader see, feel, and hear the electricity of his renowned stage performance blossoming on the page. Bao's poems haunt our collective American psyche until a 'new region of the tongue is discovered' that lets us know what 'tastes like the middle of the crosshairs of a drone bomber / tastes like science concocting survival.'" <strong>--Tyehimba Jess, author of <em>Olio</em></strong></p> <p>"Bao Phi's <em>Thousand Star Hotel</em> echoes the fire in his earlier work, which skewers racism and class with the precision of a skilled chef. Yet, when Phi splits open the vulnerable and humbling moments of love, childhood, and fatherhood, he creates a body of satisfying, poignant poems that create moments of quiet introspection like diners hushed by the first bites of an anticipated meal. Bao Phi carries an honest, powerful voice, and he is not afraid to look into the boiling pots of his past or the roiling violence in America and abroad." <strong>--Tara Betts, author of <em>Break the Habit</em></strong></p> <p>"<em>Thousand Star Hotel</em> is equal parts heartbreaking and bitingly funny... This volume is a must-read for readers seeking a greater understanding of race, but also for any reader who has children or parents, experienced heartbreak, or just loves the sound of finely wrought lines." <strong><em>--Star Tribune</em></strong></p> <p> </p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Ange Mlinko is the author of Starred Wire, a National Poetry Series Award winner, and Matinées, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year. Poems from this collection have appeared in The New Yorker, The London Review of Books, Poetry magazine, and elsewhere. A longtime East Coast resident and language columnist for The Nation, she currently lives in Beirut.
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