Out Now: 100 Chinese Silences
About the Book
“Timothy Yu’s first book of poems, 100 Chinese Silences, brims with sharp, angry, sarcastic and tender poems. He delivers dazzling lines with the deadpan wit and precise timing of Buster Keaton, the stone-faced master of silence. In fact, I had not realized until now—and I mean NOW—that Keaton is really the Timothy Yu of silent films, while Yu is Yu, a slayer of dragons, who knows the millions of sinister and inscrutable ways the Chinese have been silenced in blockbuster films, best-selling novels, Broadway musicals and award-winning poems read on NPR, and closely scrutinized in graduate classes and parking lots of Asian fusion take-out joints with funny names. Not only does Yu make Ezra Pound and Gary Snyder stand on their pointy heads in ways that are illuminating and funny, but he also skewers Jeb Bush, Billy Collins, Mary Oliver, Marianne Moore, and Eliot Weinberger right through their bright yellow Chinese hearts. You got to love a poet who can do that and never miss his mark. I present you with Timothy Yu, noble Chinese archer and master poet.”— John Yau, author of Further Adventures in Monochrome and Egyptian Sonnets
There are one hundred kinds of Chinese silence: the silence of unknown grandfathers; the silence of borrowed Buddha and rebranded Confucius; the silence of alluring stereotypes and exotic reticence. These poems make those silences heard. Writing back to an “orientalist” tradition that has defined modern American poetry, these 100 Chinese silences unmask the imagined Asias of American literature, revealing the spectral Asian presence that haunts our most eloquent lyrics and self-satisfied wisdom. Rewriting poets from Ezra Pound and Marianne Moore to Gary Snyder and Billy Collins, this book is a sharply critical and wickedly humorous travesty of the modern canon, excavating the Asian (American) bones buried in our poetic language.
This title is released as an open access second edition as part of punctum’s Special Collections project.
About the First Edition
Leah Silvieus, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Hyphen.
Matt Sutherland, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Foreword Reviews.
Safia Jama, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Boston Review.
“Turning ‘Chinese Silence’ on Its Head: A Conversation with Timothy Yu,” Lantern Review Blog.
John Bradley, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Rain Taxi.
Adam Aitken, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Cordite Poetry Review.
John Bloomberg-Rissmann, Review of 100 Chinese Silences by Timothy Yu, Galatea Resurrects #26.
About the Author
Timothy Yu is the author of the poetry collection 100 Chinese Silences and three chapbooks: 15 Chinese Silences, Journey to the West, and, with Kristy Odelius, Kiss the Stranger. He is also the author of Diasporic Poetics: Asian Writing in the United States, Canada, and Australia (Oxford) and Race and the Avant-Garde: Experimental and Asian American Poetry since 1965 (Stanford). He is the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Twenty-First-Century American Poetry and Nests and Strangers: On Asian American Women Poets. His work has appeared in Poetry, The New York Times Magazine, Fence, and The New Republic. He is the Martha Meier Renk-Bascom Professor of Poetry and professor of English and Asian American studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and serves as executive editor of Contemporary Literature.