Distant center

Ha Jin, 1956-

Book - 2018

A Distant Center moves award-winning fiction writer Ha Jin's astounding poetic talent into the spotlight. Originally inscribed in Chinese and rendered into English by Ha Jin, these poems operate between cultures, languages, and poetic traditions. The result is a generous hybrid space in which vast territory is explored adventurously: exile and immigration, personal memories and current crisis. This poetry confronts China's fraught political history while recalling and embodying its timeless culture and landscape. The poet is plainspoken and insightful, addressing the turmoil of displacement with meditative wisdom, self-reflection, and playfulness. Ha Jin has arrived at the height of his powers as a poet; his is a brilliant mind wr...estling gracefully with the pain of an uprooted life--back cover.

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Subjects
Published
Port Townsend, Washington : Copper Canyon Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Ha Jin, 1956- (author)
Physical Description
viii, 75 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781556594625
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet and novelist Jin (The Boat Rocker) shares an honest, restrained look at his philosophies about home, writing, and staying true to oneself in these muted, yet arresting poems. He writes how "at night I often hear a voice/ whisper, tickling my ear:/ 'there's no meaning in an effortless life-/ you came into this world/ just to strive into another self.'" The poems, originally composed in Chinese, are often addressed to a "you," which can take the form of a "little rascal" wren attempting to build a nest above the author's door or a schoolchild who is unwilling to practice Chinese calligraphy. But most of the time, Jin's "you" is aimed as much at the self as it is the reader: "May you have/ fresh excitement every day, but don't/ linger at any charming site for long. If you are/ blazing a path, do not expect to meet/ a fellow traveler." This fine collection of handsomely crafted musings displays Jin's signature simplicity and offers readers a guide to the creative process: "You must hold your quiet center,/ where you do what only you can do./ If others call you a maniac or a fool,/ just let them wag their tongues./ If some praise your perseverance,/ don't feel too happy about it -/ only solitude is a lasting friend." (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Many know Ha Jin for his fiction, the Pulitzer finalist War Trash and National Book Award-winning Waiting being two novels of note. However, he has also written six poetry collections in English. Clear, centered, and lacking artifice, this latest is a quiet series of contemplations about the domestic and home building. Home here takes a few shapes-the arms of a lover, the country from which the speaker and his family came, the simple pleasures of the quotidian. While some of Ha Jin's representations of the home, specifically those of gender roles and dynamics, may feel out of step for some, his tenderness, clarity, and honesty will make readers feel as if they are listening to an old friend wax poetic over coffee. VERDICT This pleasant collection will appeal to fans of W.S. Merwin, Billy Collins, and Mary Oliver, with the poems about China even eliciting resonances with Charles Simic. But some readers may leave feeling underwhelmed by its simplicity and quotidian focus. Those looking for more contemporary Chinese poetry in English might be better served by Liu Xia's Empty Chairs. [See Prepub Alert, 10/22/17.]-Trevor Ketner, Junior Library Guild © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

A Center You must hold your quiet center, where you do what only you can do. If others call you a maniac or a fool, just let them wag their tongues. If some praise your perseverance, don't feel too happy about it-- only solitude is a lasting friend. You must hold your distant center. Don't move even if earth and heaven quake. If others think you are insignificant, that's because you haven't held on long enough. As long as you stay put year after year, eventually you will find a world begin to revolve around you. If Eating Is a Culture We eat mice. Mice have nice glossy fur and can give you a head of thick hair. Even if you're bald they can restore your hair. We eat cats. Cats, quick by nature, can make you smarter, or at least livelier. We eat frogs. Frogs can swim and crow loudly. They can make your voice resonant. Even in the rainy season you won't develop rheumatism. We eat foxes. Foxes are cunning and swift and can increase your agility in dodging traps laid for you. We eat tigers. Tigers, powerful and fierce, can strengthen your body and enhance your potency. They can help you conquer and dominate anywhere. We eat phoenixes and dragons but cannot catch them throughout heaven and earth and ocean. So we eat snakes for dragons and chickens for phoenixes so that we can eat them up as well. Weasels In those days weasels often hexed villagers, bewitching young girls and women of frail health. Such a victim would rave in a weasel's voice, trembling and brandishing her arms. Her family would rush out, shouting and beating a basin to scare away the weasel casting the spell. Some carried brooms to thrash the creature if they found it. Once the rascal fled the crazed person would return to calm. Nowadays no one believes that animals can hex humans. Instead we send the possessed to a shrink or hospital. Sorcery is nothing but a superstition. Yet if a voice cries out, "Go chase the weasel away!" I might hurry out to search through haystacks, bushes, firewood in hopes of finding a weasel shrieking and rocking in spasms. A 58-Year-Old Painter Leaving for America Tomorrow you will leave Shanghai, the city you used to love, to look for another life far away. "Probably another death," you often joke with a smile these days. You have attempted death several times. Expel it from your mind. No matter how hard life is there you must continue to live. As long as you are alive there will be miracles. Indeed, you have no English or youth for starting over, only your painting brush and fortitude. In that strange land you must live, as always, with stubbornness and care. You must quit drinking and avoid staying up all night. Keep in mind the meaning of your existence: wherever you land, your footprints will become milestones. Cemetery I have seen the beauty of that cemetery, where grassy slopes glow with sunshine and the North Atlantic tides lap at the pebbles and granite steps. Tombstones spread from winding paths, where Mexican workers trim flowers. It's so peaceful and sunny everywhere and everything is neatly organized. I can see why both of you want to go there and even purchased lots for your families who are yet to leave our motherland. Knowing where to end can help to curb your wandering heart and stabilize this drifting life. In fact, a fine cemetery is a village or town of another kind, where people can settle afterward. I envy your clarity about your journey's end, but I'm still not sure where to go, never attached to any place. Even after this life, I might continue to roam. Missed Time My notebook has remained blank for months thanks to the light you shower around me. I have no use for my pen, which lies languorously without grief. Nothing is better than to live a storyless life that needs no writing for meaning-- when I am gone, let others say they lost a happy man, though no one can tell how happy I was. The One Following You Because of you, that coastal city has appeared on my map. In my mind it's no longer a fishing village far away. Every morning I wake to follow you on the bus to work, passing the bay enclosed in mist and through a long tunnel into town. We then walk along the street shaded by maples, enter a gate to a schoolhouse and finally stand before a room of children. You open a textbook and read out with them legends of triumph and updated fables. You also draw on the chalkboard a tomorrow that might be more colorful. Whether you know it or not, whether you like it or not, you always bring along an invisible guard. Excerpted from A Distant Center by Ha Jin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.