Wu Sheng has written vivid poems about rural life and the land since the 1960s, when he became one of Taiwan's most popular poets. His poems are rooted in the soil, embued with an unshakable affinity for the people who till it, sweat over it, and eventually are buried in it, and serve as his personal response to the industrialization, urbanization and globalization of his vanishing world.
Advance galleys to Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Yorker, NPR; Review and feature article campaign to 50 publications, including poetry, Asian, environmental, mainstream; Featured title at AWP, Boston Book Fair, Brooklyn Book Festival, ALTA; Eblasts to creative writing, Chinese/Asian Studies departments; Social media campaign; Submission to all relevant literary awards; Potential core text for World Literature, Comparative Literature, Creative Writing courses; Special attention to northern California bookstores and media, where translator lives; Ads in Chinese Literature Today, Words Without Borders.About the AuthorWu Sheng, born in 1944, is a farmer, teacher, poet, essayist and environmental activist who lives in central Taiwan. He has written more than a dozen volumes of poems and essays, and in 2007, received the Wu Sanlian Literature Award, one of Taiwan's most prestigious honors. In 2002, he and his wife spent a year exploring and reporting on the social and environmental conditions of Taiwan's longest river, the Zhuoshui River. He also purchased land near his farm and created a park forested with trees native to Taiwan. Wu Sheng's work was the first to be digitized for the National Museum of Taiwan Literature's digital archives, and many of his poems have been set to music in two published sets of cds.
Book InformationISBN 9781938890796
Author Wu ShengFormat Paperback
Page Count 180
Imprint Zephyr PressPublisher Zephyr Press