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    Engine Empire: Poems

    Engine Empire: Poems

    by Cathy Park Hong


    eBook

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      ISBN-13: 9780393239263
    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Publication date: 04/30/2012
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 96
    • File size: 187 KB

    Cathy Park Hong is the author of Translating Mo’um and Dance Dance Revolution and has won a Pushcart Prize and the Barnard Women Poets Prize. She lives in New York and teaches at Sarah Lawrence College.

    Table of Contents

    Ballad of Our Jim

    Fort Ballads 19

    Ballad in O 26

    Abecedarian Western 27

    Ballad in A 28

    Man that Scat 29

    Bowietown Ballads 3

    Ballad in I 36

    The Song of Katydids 37

    Shangdu, My Artful Boomtown!

    Year of the Pig 41

    Aubade 44

    Market Forces Are Brighter Than the Sun 45

    Adventures in Shangdu 46

    The Engineer of Vertical Frontiers 56

    A Little Tête-à-tête 57

    Gift 59

    Seed Seller's Sonnet 61

    The World Cloud

    Come Together 65

    Year of the Amateur 67

    Engines Within the Throne 68

    A Visitation 70

    The Infinite Reply 72

    Ready-Made 73

    Who's Who 75

    A Wreath of Hummingbirds 77

    The Golden State 79

    The Quattrocento 81

    Get Away from It All 84

    Fable of the Last Untouched Town 89

    Notes 95

    What People are Saying About This

    David Mitchell

    Cathy Park Hong is a seer of visions. Engine Empire is a brainy, glinting triptych about what powers 'progress,' what its human costs are, and where it might be taking our species. Novelistic, meditative, offbeat, and soulful, Hong’s poetry is many fathoms deep.

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    "A brainy, glinting triptych . . . . Novelistic, meditative, offbeat, and soulful, Cathy Park Hong's poetry is many fathoms deep." —David Mitchell

    Engine Empire is a trilogy of lyric and narrative poems that evoke an array of genres and voices, from Western ballads to sonnets about industrialized China to fragmented lyric poems set in the future. Through three distinct yet interconnected sequences, Cathy Park Hong explores the collective consciousness of fictionalized boomtowns in order to explore the myth of prosperity. The first sequence, called "Ballad of Our Jim," draws inspiration from the Old West and follows a band of outlaw fortune seekers who travel to a California mining town during the 1800s. In the second sequence, "Shangdu, My Artful Boomtown!" a fictional industrialized boomtown draws its inspiration from present-day Shenzhen, China. The third and last section, "The World Cloud," is set in the far future and tracks how individual consciousness breaks up when everything—books, our private memories—becomes immediately accessible data. One of our most startlingly original poets, Hong draws together individual voices at odds with the world, voices that sing their wonder and terror.

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    Publishers Weekly
    Hong’s third book renders a triptych of frontiers—the Old West, the new East, and the digital world—where artistic acts are often tantamount to subversion. “Ballad of Our Jim,” a sequence of cowboy ballads within ballads, follows a crew of outlaws and their kidnapped boy, a rebellious bard they christened “Jim,” through an unsettled age when “the whole country is in a duel and we want no part of it.” “Shangdu, My Artful Boomtown!” a mix of epistolary, prose, lyric, and persona poems, grapples with vocation and origin in a globalizing era, addressing directly and indirectly Shakespeare, Coleridge, and Berryman. Especially striking is “Adventures in Shangdu,” a sequence of prose poems depicting a dystopia whose citizens include a factory worker reproducing Rembrandts and a prawn vendor executed for “tilt his surveillance camera so it caught nothing but the sun.” Sharp and lyrical poems in “The World Cloud” take on digital realms, where “the search engine is inside us,/ the world is our display.” This book is full of luminous surprises. (May)
    Prairie Schooner
    Will force you to question the possibilities life offers, in the past, the present, and the future.— Jeff Alessandrelli
    Bookforum
    An entertaining read, even as it says stark and haunting things about race, love, technology, and the capacities of language to hide or reveal unwelcome truths. . . . While there have always been lots of writers warning us about the corruptibility of language in the wrong hands, few others have made an unbrave new world such a pleasure to discover.— Craig Morgan Teicher
    Cleveland Plain-Dealer
    Reading this book feels like listening to a symphony: Themes develop, vanish and recur amid Hong’s abundant verbal music. . . . Hong’s triumph is to alienate us from ourselves in order to reaffirm what makes us human.— Dave Lucas
    Slate
    Part of what makes that worthwhile is Hong’s ability to turn her language into more than pastiche, developing styles of writing that feel dense with the historical richness of the English language—a history of borrowing, invention, and manipulation that Hong honors, in part, by making room for her own inventiveness. . . . a sustaining book, one that believes in the value of being moved by words—the value, that is, of being human..— Jonathan Farmer
    NPR.org
    Cathy Park Hong does everything short of inventing her own language in order to show cultures clashing and spilling into each other.
    Huffington Post
    If Hong is one of the best poets we have in America—and she is—it's because she filters her deeply-felt topical obsessions through such imaginative lenses that even a well-read reader can only gape in amazement.— Seth Abramson
    Craig Morgan Teicher - Bookforum
    An entertaining read, even as it says stark and haunting things about race, love, technology, and the capacities of language to hide or reveal unwelcome truths. . . . While there have always been lots of writers warning us about the corruptibility of language in the wrong hands, few others have made an unbrave new world such a pleasure to discover.
    Dave Lucas - Cleveland Plain-Dealer
    Reading this book feels like listening to a symphony: Themes develop, vanish and recur amid Hong’s abundant verbal music. . . . Hong’s triumph is to alienate us from ourselves in order to reaffirm what makes us human.
    Jonathan Farmer - Slate
    Part of what makes that worthwhile is Hong’s ability to turn her language into more than pastiche, developing styles of writing that feel dense with the historical richness of the English language—a history of borrowing, invention, and manipulation that Hong honors, in part, by making room for her own inventiveness. . . . a sustaining book, one that believes in the value of being moved by words—the value, that is, of being human..
    Jeff Alessandrelli - Prairie Schooner
    Will force you to question the possibilities life offers, in the past, the present, and the future.
    David Mitchell
    Cathy Park Hong is a seer of visions. Engine Empire is a brainy, glinting triptych about what powers 'progress,' what its human costs are, and where it might be taking our species. Novelistic, meditative, offbeat, and soulful, Hong’s poetry is many fathoms deep.”
    Library Journal
    Hong's poetry engine generates imagined worlds that weirdly parallel the ones we know. The book (her third, after Dance Dance Revolution) has three parts, each set in a different milieu: a rollicking Wild West that mildly resembles California à la Michael Ondaatje's Billy the Kid; Shangdu, a prototype boomtown; and a cloud-based future in which one can recall "the antique ringtones of singing/ wrens, babbling babies, and ballad medleys…." If Shangdu recalls Coleridge's Xanadu or lime tree bower ("Shangdu, my artful boomtown!" is the section's title), it is also the scene of rampant, dehumanizing development, where Highrise Apartment 88 is erected so hurriedly that one whole wall is omitted. Throughout, even the words sound invented: telenovela, thip, harmine—but they're not. But Webster's won't get you too far in these regions, where people live to be 150 and cowboys scat sing, "I'm a natty cross-dressing/ wrestler in possum/ chaps, my boots can smash/ any clapboard slat…." The middle and final sections of this triptych are stronger than the first, where sound gets the better of sense, but much of this book is deliciously inventive. VERDICT A smart, disorienting look at our present-future set out in a rich hybrid language.—Ellen Kaufman, New York

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