Magnolia: Poems (Paperback)

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Description


A SPIN, Electric Literature, Book Riot, and The Catholic Post Best Poetry Collection of 2022


Finalist for the RSL Ondaatje Prize & Forward Prize for Best First Collection


A Lit Hub Most Anticipated Book of the Year


A Chicago Review of Books Best Book of the Month


Magnolia, Nina Mingya Powles’ exquisite debut poetry collection, pushes the borders of languages and poetic forms to examine memories, myths, and the experiences of a mixed-race girlhood. From Aotearoa to London, from Shanghai to New York City, these poems journey across shifting, luminescent cities in search of connection: through pop culture, through food, through vivid colors. Scenes from Mulan, Blade Runner, and In the Mood for Love braid together with silken tofu and freshly steamed baozi. At the heart of the collection is “Field notes on a downpour,” a lyrical sequence that questions the limits of translation and our ability to understand one another. Alone, the speaker recognizes that “certain languages contain more kinds of rain than others, and I have eaten them all."


Full of hunger and longing for a home that can embrace a person’s complexities, Magnolia draws on every sense to arrive at profound, yet intimate insights, and introduces readers to a brilliant new voice in poetry.



About the Author


Nina Mingya Powles is the author of several poetry zines and chapbooks, including Girls of the Drift and field notes on a downpour, and Tiny Moons, a food memoir. In 2019, she founded Bitter Melon, a poetry press that publishes handmade chapbooks by Asian writers. Her debut collection of essays, Small Bodies of Water, was published by Canongate in the summer of 2021. Magnolia was a finalist for the 2020 Forward Prize for Best First Collection, the 2021 RSL Ondaatje Prize, and the New Zealand Book Awards. Originally from Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand, Nina currently lives in London.

Praise For…


Captivating. . . . full of longing and wit.
— Poetry Foundation

Evocative.
— Poets & Writers

Compelling. . . . graceful. . . . Powles is one of the most talented writers of her generation, and she is quickly establishing herself across multiple genres. Magnolia [has] numerous poems that linger long after you set down the book.

— The Poetry Question

Beguiling. . . . pushes at the edges of form to bend language into new and surprising shapes.
— Chicago Review of Books

A sensory feast. . . . readers not only have the chance to see, but to taste, smell, hear, and touch language.
— Ploughshares

Compelling.
— Lit Hub

Evocative. . . . a collection of complex abundance.
— SPIN

Fascinating. . . . There are myriad reasons to cuddle up with this extraordinary collection.
— Book Riot

A pop-culture infused meditation on language and longing.
— Largehearted Boy

Stirring. . . . Powles powerfully juxtaposes moments of social commentary with insights about language. . . . [an] intriguing collection.
— Publishers Weekly

Sumptuous.
— Shelf Awareness

Nina Mingya Powles’ Magnolia emerges out of the scalloped terrain of cinema, portraiture, dreams, and translation in which lush decay exists alongside hunger. The seemingly distant and intimate are violently reversed, splitting flesh to reveal Shanghai as the site of an expanding record of global selfhood and home. Sharpness and lightness entombed like the 'loam-eyed wolf-flowers' calling back from silence, stillness, death, and life.

— E. J. Koh, author of The Magical Language of Others and A Lesser Love

Rarely has a poetry book given so much to savor: in learning a language, in considering a film by Wong Kar-wai or Hayao Miyazaki, in biting a persimmon, in reading a subway map, in wandering the labyrinths of Eileen Chang’s Shanghai, flying through time and space. The language in Nina Mingya Powles’ Magnolia is so alive it generates tastes, sensations: 'bundles of sticky rice wrapped in leaves, freshly steamed' becomes 'heat rising up between us.' I long wanted to stay in the deep universe of this book after it was over.

— Sally Wen Mao, author of Oculus

Nina Mingya Powles is a poet who writes with simultaneous elegance and wildness, opening up lyric moments from an astonishing range of sources—good breakfasts, bad movies, great movies, subway maps, cities and flowers, Chinese characters whose layers are peeled like ripe tangerines. I so love this poet’s appetite—for meaning, for music, for feasts figurative as well as literal, and for connections across histories too often kept separate. This book refuses tidy categories, speaking instead from a 'mouth [that’s] a river in full bloom.
— Chen Chen, author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities
Product Details
ISBN: 9781953534217
ISBN-10: 195353421X
Publisher: Tin House Books
Publication Date: August 16th, 2022
Pages: 104
Language: English