โWhat does it mean to seek a life beyond belonging? Traveling through rich landscapes of memory, Ae Hee Leeโs Asterism retraces the poetโs lineage from South Korea to Peru to the United States, restlessly seeking the self โat the edge of every edge.โ Words bloom and refract as they move across borders; uncertainties ring out in the gaps. Yet what is most powerful about this book is how it reaches again and ...Full description
โWhat does it mean to seek a life beyond belonging? Traveling through rich landscapes of memory, Ae Hee Leeโs Asterism retraces the poetโs lineage from South Korea to Peru to the United States, restlessly seeking the self โat the edge of every edge.โ Words bloom and refract as they move across borders; uncertainties ring out in the gaps. Yet what is most powerful about this book is how it reaches again and again toward the reader, toward the possibilities that exist between โmy air and your ear.โ A tender, finely-tuned collection, and a beautiful contribution to the canon of Korean diasporic literature.โโFranny ChoiโI have been waiting quite a while for a poet to risk the elegance and gestural audacity of the Baroque upon issues of origin and identity. All too often, these issues vex and distort our poetry. But in Asterism, they amplify the language of Ae Hee Lee onto a ravishing spree of utterance and image. There is great breadth here, and heartening innovation.โโDonald RevellโAe Hee Leeโs Asterism is a sweeping tour de force of a collection. In this stunning debut, mouths eat, name, translate, dream, kiss. If we are what we eat, then, in these pages, the poet is everything. The body is a chestnut, the country a walnut, and homesickness a woman licking a spoon. Moreover, the poetโs mouth is a conduit to โan inward- / stretching universe of lungs / and dark matter.โ And Leeโs breath, which moves visibly over these poems, carries us into constellations of possibilities and light.โโWendy Chen, author of UnearthingsโI believe the poetics of heritage and belonging in this Asterism are transformative. But how does Ae Hee Lee do it? There is a sensuality that comes from kinship, and goes beyond it: โmy mother teaches me that in Korean to forget is also expressed as to have peeled.โ Which is to say, there is a knowledge in this book that is both hidden, and in plain sight. Transformative, indeed. A marvelous work, filled with terrific imagery andโperhaps more importantlyโmystery, Asterism is a brilliant debut.โ โIlya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic and Dancing in Odessa