BiblioVault – Books about Da, Lam Thi My

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books about Da, Lam Thi My

Green Rice: Poems by Lam Thi My Da

Lam Thi My Da
Northwestern University Press, 2005

When Washington Post columnist Edward Hirsch reprinted Lâm Thị Mỹ Dạ’s “Garden Fragrance” and “Night Harvest” (from Six Vietnamese Poets), he gave special praise to the simultaneous clarity and complexity of Dạ’s poetry. Now, for the first time in English, readers can enjoy a full, bilingual volume of her selected work. While many of her poems deal with her experiences during the Vietnam War, they are grounded in her intimate involvement with the landscape, flora, and fauna of her country, and explore love, motherhood, women’s issues, and the sometimes difficult movement into middle age.

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Six Vietnamese Poets: Bilingual Edition

Edited by Kevin Bowen and Nguyen Ba Chung
Northwestern University Press, 2002

Library of Congress PL4378.65.E5A135 2002 | Dewey Decimal 895.92213408

Six Vietnamese Poets brings together for the first time the works of six writers, three women and three men, who came of age during the American War in Vietnam. In their verse, contemporary readers discover the richness and diversity of Vietnamese life and literature from a bold range of poetic styles, from free verse to romantic lyric to traditional classic Vietnamese forms. This bilingual edition features poets from North and South, men and women, combat soldiers and poet-soldiers writing of life in Vietnam through the turbulent final four decades of the twentieth century.

brings together for the first time the works of six writers, three women and three men, who came of age during the American War in Vietnam. In their verse, contemporary readers discover the richness and diversity of Vietnamese life and literature from a bold range of poetic styles, from free verse to romantic lyric to traditional classic Vietnamese forms. This bilingual edition features poets from North and South, men and women, combat soldiers and poet-soldiers writing of life in Vietnam through the turbulent final four decades of the twentieth century.

Speaking to the Heart

After a long night up writing poems,
a streak of sunlight leapt into my room.
I ran to the yard,
running as if I were a child,
footprints breaking the earth’s first dew,
chest brushing softly the short grass.
Earth and sky seeped into me like wine.
Startled,
I saw my heart in the shape of a ploughshare<
resting on the earth’s shoulder,
the heart thumping, steadily ploughing into time.

—Lam Thi My Da

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