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Two Menus (Phoenix Poets)
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About the Author

Rachel DeWoskin is the author of five critically acclaimed novels: Banshee; Someday We Will Fly; Blind; Big Girl Small; and Repeat After Me; and the memoir Foreign Babes in Beijing; along with the poetry collection Two Menus, also published by the University of Chicago Press. Her essays, poems, reviews, and translations have appeared in the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Sunday Times Magazine of London, Condé Nast Traveler, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, Agni, Ploughshares, New Delta Review, New Orleans Review, Seneca Review, and numerous journals and anthologies. She is on the core creative writing faculty at the University of Chicago and affiliated faculty in Jewish and East Asian Studies. DeWoskin serves on the national steering committee of Writers for Democratic Action (WDA).

Reviews

"'The restaurant in Beijing called Bitterness / and Happiness has two menus, ' recalls the insatiable speaker of this bountiful debut. Combining a novelist's narrative command with a poet's faith in the mystical felicities of rhyme, DeWoskin chronicles a life lived in voracious pursuit of all aspects of earthly experience. Whether rock climbing in China, river rafting in California, nursing her child, grieving another's child, visiting a family member in prison, or a dying friend in the hospital, she savors the living pith of each passing moment, and transmutes it into nourishing song. 'Here's how / we stay human even torched by sorrow, ' she writes, singing down mortal dread. 'Spackled, rageful, wracked, we sparkle.'"--Suzanne Bauffam, author of A Pillow Book "DeWoskin's spectacular debut Two Menus offers us a lyrical banquet of tempting contradiction. In the title poem, we learn of "[t]he restaurant in Beijing called Bitterness / and Happiness", which has "two menus: the first of excess, / second, scarcity." Through DeWoskin's own uncanny language, both larger-than-life and daringly precise, we read to rediscover the boundaries that both divide and join our worlds: us/them, love/disgust, safety/danger, sanity/madness, language/silence. How can one life be expected to take in all that there is before us? How can it all make sense? And yet, with lucid description, and with abiding love and wit, each poem in this audacious book asks for more--even when it hurts."--Frederick Speers, author of So Far Afield "Smart, fierce and formally brilliant, the poems in Two Menus are wonderfully energetic and alive. Spinning between love and loss, childhood and womanhood, Chinese and English, DeWoskin creates a blaze of language that stuns with precision, wisdom and joy."--Kirun Kapur, author of Visiting Indira Gandhi's Palmist "DeWoskin takes us from grief to romance in Two Menus, a debut of stunning clarity and formal dexterity. The subtleties of this book are balanced by the world each poem means to hold. DeWoskin is a poet of things, of the image, and of the narratives that attention to image allows. This is a beautiful book."--Jericho Brown, author of The Tradition

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