Author: t
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Nicholas Y.B. Wong’s poem “The Confession of a Foot Fetish” is published in The Q Review. Read it here. – – See Nicholas Y.B. Wong’s Cha profile. –
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Truly poetically handsome, this lot. Do you want to join us? – – –
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David William Hill’s “Stone Fruit”, which will be published in the September 2010 issue of Cha, is a beautiful prose poem. Although short, it provides the reader with a powerful sense of time and place. We read it again and…
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Learn more about the book here. –
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Elizabeth Weinberg’s beautifully written and observed “The Earth that Stands Before Us” is one of the three short stories featured in the forthcoming issue of Cha. The three-part piece, which is a story of handing on tradition to a younger…
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Earlier, we unveiled the beautiful cover of our September 2010 issue here. Apart from “Wall in Namdaemun Market, Seoul”, we will also be publishing four other photographs (three from Singapore and one from China) by Alvin, whose poems were published…
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Cha contributor Steven Digman is featured in The Herald-Mail. Read the article here. – – Steven Digman’s photography was published in Issue 10 of Cha. – –
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‘Potent references’ was the comment guest editor Royston Tester gave to Shirley Lee’s poem “Letter to a Prominent Korean Man And to You”, which will be published in the September 2010 issue of Cha. Royston was right: potent references indeed.…
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There is an interview with Cha contributors Viki Holmes and Kate Rogers in Writers’ Digest. They talk about their own poetry writing and their edited anthology, Not A Muse. Read the interview here. – Viki Holmes’s poetry was published in…
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Melody S. Gee has new works published in Blackbird: an Online Journal of Literature & the Arts. Read them here. – – Melody S. Gee’s poem “Giving” was published in Issue #9 of Cha. – –
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Read Viki Holmes’s “Aubade” and Peauladd Huy’s “Before the Bones” and “The Mango Tree” in the Autumn 2010 issue of Asia Literary Review. – – Viki Holmes’s poetry was published in issue#3 of Cha and her review of Gillian Sze’s…
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In Rumjhum Biswas’s poem “Bones”, which will be published in the September 2010 issue of Cha, the persona tells us about her mother’s small bones — ‘still warm and sticky / from [her] smoldering pyre’. This is, then, a poem…
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Angela Eun Ji Koh’s poem “Sex” is published in the September 2010 issue of Stirring: A Literary Collection. Read it here. The cover of this edition is by Cha co-editor Tam. – – Angela Eun Ji Koh’s poetry was published…
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Women in Publishing Society Hong Kong – Invites you to learn more about photography and on following your passion – – Chinese-born-Canadian, Norm received his Bachelor of Arts degree (cum laude) in 1984 at the University of Saskatchewan, and his…
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Read the article here. – – Viki Holmes’s poetry was published in issue#3 of Cha and her review of Gillian Sze’s Fish Bones was published in issue #8 of the journal. – –
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Six poems by Todd Swift: “Improbable August”, “Pont D’Avignon”, “Dropping the Bottle”, “And All My Hope is Gone”, “Old Time” and “Love or Poetry” are featured on Peony Moon. Read the pieces here. – – Todd Swift’s poems were published…
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Mascara Literary Review‘s “New Worlds’ section of Issue 7 features poems by Cha contributors Ocean Vuong and Viki Holmes. Read Ocean’s “Arrival by Fire” and “If You Are a Refugee” here and Viki’s “aqueous” and “discoveries made collecting botanic samples”…
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Cha contributors Ouyang Yu and Daren Shiau are participants of the Melbourne Writers Festival 2010. Learn more about the festival here. – – Ouyang Yu’s poem “Bad English” was published in issue #4 of Cha and analysed on A Cup…
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Congratulations to Cha contributor Jennifer Wong; her poetry collection is longlisted for the Proverse Prize 2010. More information about the prize here. – Jennifer’s poem “Companions” was published in the first anniversary issue of Cha and nominated for inclusion in…
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Come to Poetry OutLoud!!! First Wednesday of the Month at 8pm at Fringe Studio, Hong Kong Fringe Club Next session is on the 1st of September 2010 The MC is Eddie Tay If you would like to read, please contact…
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There is a short review of Mary Lee’s 80± ─ post-80s in the eyes of post-80s in The Asian Review of Books. Read the article here. – Images from the book will be featured in the September 2010 issue of…
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Bob Bradshaw’s two new poems, “Dear Brother” and “Monet’s Water Lilies” are now published in the Summer 2010 issue of Loch Raven Review. Read them here. -0 – Read Bob Bradshaw’s Cha profile. – –
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Congratulations to Cha contributor Alison Wong! Her novel As the Earth Turns Silver has won the New Zealand Post Book Award for Fiction 2010. Cha published a review of As The Earth Turns Silver in November 2009. Alison’s poem “There’s…
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Cha contributor Lee Herrick has recently taken up the position of contributing editor for Solo Press, which was founded in 1969. Writers published by them included Robert Creeley, Robert Bly, Lucille Clifton, and many others. Learn more about Solo Press…
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Kavita Jindal‘s poem “Chaining the Ecstatic” is featured on Eyewear. Read it here. – – Kavita Jindal’s poetry was published in issue #1 of Cha. – –
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Divya Rajan’s “The Weight of Silence” is now published in Ultra Violet. Read the poem here. – – Divya Rajan’s poetry has been published in issue #8 of Cha. Her poem, “Factory Girls”, was discussed in A Cup of Fine…
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––– – –––– Cha mourns the Hong Kong people who were killed in Manila. Requiescat in pace. 本來無一物,何處惹塵埃. 但人總是血肉之軀. 願死者早日安息, 家人們能勇敢面對將來. – — – – –
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Cha is a big fan of Mary Lee. We have previously published her photography three times: “Tibet” in Issue 1, “Teipei” in Issue 2 and “Japan” in Issue 4. Recently, Mary directed an important and meaningful Hong Kong photobook project…
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Five new poems by Mani Rao, “Brahma’s Moment”, “Monkey Puzzle”, “Shiva’s Digs”, “Panchali” and “For Pootana’s Sake”, are published in the July 2010 issue of The Brown Critique. Read them here. – – Mani Rao’s poetry was published in issue…
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Helle Annette Slutz’s poem “Another City Which You Leave” was the first poem accepted for publication in the September 2010 issue of Cha. It begins with a quote from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities: For those who pass it without entering,…