Ink Knows No Borders
Edited by Patrice Vecchione and Alyssa Raymond
Edited by Patrice Vecchione and Alyssa Raymond
Category: Poetry | Teen & Young Adult Fiction | Teen & Young Adult Social Issues
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$16.95
Mar 12, 2019 | ISBN 9781609809072 | Young Adult
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Praise
“Though aimed at teens, this vivid, vital collection … should find a ready audience with adults as well…. With bravura and hard-won insight, these poems explore identity, survival and home from first- and second-generation perspectives, offering a multiplicity of impressions and memories.” —Mary Quattlebaum, Washington Post
“I was moved again and again by the poems in this brave, beautiful and necessary collection. I found echoes of myself in many of the pieces, and I know so many young immigrants and Americans will find themselves, too. But it goes beyond that. I wish this book would be taught in homogenous communities, too, so readers with little understanding of immigration will have the chance to see its humanity. This is the most important book we will read this year.” —Matt de la Peña, NY Times bestselling and Newbery Award winning author
*”Poems as piercing and reflective as the shards of a shattered mirror offer stunning glimpses into the lives and experiences of immigrants and refugees. Sixty-four pieces (many previously published) in a variety of forms capture an outcry of voices mourning loss, celebrating survival, breaking and remaking self and home.” —The Horn Book, starred review
“This symphony of poetry is a necessary series of bruises and balms that will comfort those who have endured, uplift those who continue to struggle, and educate others.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review
“An urgent and timely new poetry collection.” —Nina McLaughlin, Boston Globe
“Vecchione and Raymond have gathered 64 poets from all over the world, their poetic voices as diverse as their experiences. Yet, they hold one element in common: a belief in dignity as an essential human right. … these stories should resonate with youth who feel life deeply.” —Booklist
“This piercing poetry collection’s sixty-four pieces (many previously published) in a variety of forms mourn loss, celebrate survival, and explore breaking and remaking self and home. The poets—immigrants and refugees themselves, or from immigrant households—tackle topics including racism, displacement, assimilation, and resilience. The contributors all offer timely, culturally specific frames for the universal struggle of growing into oneself. Appended with brief poet biographies.” —The Horn Book, recommended titles for 2019
“An intricate, hard-won tapestry of poetic experience, with density best suited to thoughtful browsing or individual readalouds rather than reading straight through but with many resonant poems that will strike a chord either of recognition or realization with young readers.” —Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
“We are a nation of immigrants, but as we grow further away from our roots we tend to forget. These poems help us to reconnect to both negative states (poverty, separation-anxiety, fear of the unknown etc.) and new opportunities and challenges.” —Wicked Local
Table Of Contents
Editors’ Note
Patrice Vecchione and Alyssa Raymond
Foreword
Javier Zamora
Departure: July 30, 1984
Joseph O. Legaspi
Immigrant
Lena Khalaf Tuffaha
First Light
Chen Chen
Origin / Adoption
Marci Calabretta Cancio-Bello
Dear America
Sholeh Wolpé
Second Attempt Crossing
Javier Zamora
Bent to the Earth
Blas Manuel De Luna
A Hymn to Childhood
Li-Young Lee
Immigrant Aria
Rajiv Mohabir
On Being American
Samira Ahmed
Oklahoma
Hala Alyan
On Listening to Your Teacher Take Attendance
Aimee Nezhukumatathil
The Break-In
Hafizah Geter
#Sanctuary
JoAnn Balingit
Extended Stay America
Janine Joseph
Choi Jeong Min
Franny Choi
Muslim Girlhood
Leila Chatti
Fluency
Michelle Brittan Rosado
Master Film
Solmaz Sharif
The Key
Ladan Osman
Ode to the Heart
Ellen Bass
The Sign in My Father’s Hands
Martín Espada
History Lesson
Jeff Coomer
My Father Takes to the Road
Jeff Tagami
My Grandmother Washes Her Feet in the Sink of the Bathroom at Sears
Mohja Kahf
Frank’s Nursery and Crafts
Bao Phi
In Colorado My Father Scoured and Stacked Dishes
Eduardo C. Corral
Learning to Pray
Kaveh Akbar
Naturalization
Jenny Xie
East Mountain View
Paul Tran
Acolyte
Tarfia Faizullah
Tater Tot Hot-Dish
Hieu Minh Nguyen
Pronounced
Carlos Andrés Gómez
Off-Island Chamorros
Craig Santos Perez
A New National Anthem
Ada Limón
Portrait of Isako in Wartime
Mia Ayumi Malhotra
Domesticity
Kristin Chang
The Poet at Fifteen
Erika L. Sánchez
Someday I’ll Love Ocean Vuong
Ocean Vuong
ode to the first white girl i ever loved
José Olivarez
Talks about Race
Mahtem Shiferraw
Mama
Emtithal Mahmoud
Split
Cathy Linh Che
When the Man at the Party Said He Wanted to Own a Filipino
Marianne Chan
Ode to Enclaves
Chrysanthemum Tran
Ethnic Studies
Terisa Siagatonu
The Day I Realized We Were Black
Yesenia Montilla
quaking conversation
Lenelle Moïse
Atlantis
Elizabeth Acevedo
The Border: A Double Sonnet
Alberto Ríos
Las Casas Across Nations
Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs
Mexicans Begin Jogging
Gary Soto
Field Guide Ending in a Deportation
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
I Used to Be Much Much Darker
Francisco X. Alarcón
A Habitable Grief
Eavan Boland
Return
Gala Mukomolova
Adrift
Alice Tao
Author’s Prayer
Ilya Kaminsky
Game Of Thrones
Fatimah Asghar
Oh, Daughter
Monica Sok
Refugees
Brian Bilston
Home
Safiya Sinclair
Undocumented Joy
Yosimar Reyes
self-portrait with no flag
Safia Elhillo
Afterword
Emtithal Mahmoud
Acknowledgments
Biographies
Permissions
Index
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