Thanks to Vandana Khanna and Wendy Chin-Tanner at the Lantern Review for recommending Bright Power, Dark Peace and The Palace of Contemplating Departure as top poetry books published in 2013!
Kundiman Writer-In-Residence, Sierra Nevada College
Through Jan 31st, I'll be near Lake Tahoe, at Sierra Nevada College, as the Kundiman Writer-in-Residence. Very grateful for this opportunity. Let the writing begin...
Rounding out the year in So Cal...
Three upcoming readings in Southern California! Nov 16th at the Craft and Folk Art Museum, Nov 17th at Moonday West, & Dec 8th at the Bluebird Reading Series. Details here.
A new review, by Tyler Mills
Thank you, Tyler Mills and The Collagist, for a new review of The Palace of Contemplating Departure. "The voices in this collection will stay in your head; they are voices that refuse what is easy for what is real, and they create beauty out of illusion—as devastating, and necessary, as that illusion is." Read the full review here.
Fall Readings...
On Sat, Sept 21: A celebration party for Tess Taylor's The Forage House, feat. Kate Gale, Camille Dungy, and this moi (111 Minna Gallery on Minna near Mission and 2nd). Portland on Sept 26; SF's Lit Crawl on Oct 19; and LA on Nov 16, 17, and Dec 8. Come one, come all. Details here.
The Blood-Jet Writing Hour - New Interview
Thanks to the fabulous poet and radio host, Rachelle Cruz, for having me on The Blood-Jet Writing Hour today. Listen to the 30-minute interview here.
A Slew of Bay Area July Readings
Thanks to Lyrics & Dirges, Litquake, Poetry Flash, Poetry Tuesday at Yerba Buena Gardens, and poet Anhvu Buchanan, I'll be participating in a handful of readings in the Bay Area this July. 7/13 in SF, 7/14 in Oakland, 7/16 in SF, 7/17 in Berkeley, and 7/19 back in SF. Check out the reading schedule for details.
Radio interview with J.P. Dancing Bear on "Out of Our Minds"
Here's a podcast interview with the poet, J.P. Dancing Bear, who's been hosting "Out of Our Minds," the second longest continuous poetry radio show in America, on KKUP in Cupertino, CA.
A new review in HINGED: Journal of Converging Arts
Garrett Bryant reviews The Palace of Contemplating Departure in HINGED. "Ultimately Saito leaves the reader with the tools to overcome the hardships of love and loss. Her tenacious voice and emotionally charged words give the reader grounding for our own troubles. She teaches the reader to have the courage and strength to move on." Read on.
Citizens of San Diego! A reading on 5/15
I'll be reading at the New Alchemy Series at The Upstart Crow in San Diego's Seaport Village on Wed, May 15 @ 7pm. Open mic to follow. The Upstart Crow is at 835C West Harbor Drive.
Poems on Verse Daily and Poets.org
Thanks to the editors of Verse Daily and Poets.org for posting "Shape of Fire" and "Like Any Good American" on their daily poetry feeds.
Review of "The Palace" in TAB: The Journal of Poetry & Poetics
"At times transparent and vulnerable, at others, sinuous with history and the breath of the supernatural, the heart of Brynn Saito’s first full-length collection beats dangerously, exhilaratingly, close to the surface." Continuing reading Iris Law's review of The Palace of Contemplating Departure, published today in TAB: The Journal of Poetry & Poetics.
Readings at Eastwind Books and UJCC
Two upcoming April readings: Eastwind Books in Berkeley on 4/13 and the United Japanese Christian Church in Clovis, CA on 4/14. More info here.
New poem, in Tongue
Very proud to have new work in issue no. 2 of Tongue, "an assemblage of original poetry, essays, and images that aspires to challenge comfortable gestures and distinctions. Tongue embraces translations, polyphonic exchanges across all conceivable borders." Thank you, editors!
Army of Monk: An essay in the magazine, Killing the Buddha
A new essay on monks, meditation and martial arts in South Korea, now up on Killing the Buddha's website. "Sometimes it’s the case that monks form an army and fight," the piece begins. "This has happened periodically on the Korean peninsula, over the course of the last six centuries, as Buddhist monks emerged as soldiers, fighting invaders from nearby kingdoms or foreign aggressors from China and Japan." Read on here.
The Next Big Thing
Thanks to the fabulous writers and poets, Lois Smith, Traci Brimhall and Tamiko Beyer for passing me the baton: they've answered a series of questions about their forthcoming work on their blogs, and they've called on me to do the same. Here it goes:
What is your working title of your book? The Palace of Contemplating Departure.
Where did the idea come from for the book? The book’s a collection of 42 poems; each one has a different origin story. But, the idea for the title for the book originated in the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco while I was wandering through an exhibition of photographs of the palaces in Seoul. I came across a picture of the Pavilion of Contemplating Departure in the Changdeokgung Palace and was immediately captivated by such a wistful name—so captivated that I journeyed to South Korea last month, for the first time, and I took my own photo of the book’s namesake.
What genre does your book fall under? Poetry.
Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? I would want Bill Murray to play all of the parts, including the Palace.
What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book? “A lyrical debut poetry collection of intimacy and quiet power, weaving stories of sudden departures, forced removals, and the chosen journeys in between.”
Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency? The book will be published by Red Hen Press, in March.
How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript? It took ten years and it also took two years. I’ve been working on a book of poetry for about a decade—compiling, revising, and discarding poems along the way. The current version came into fruition about two years before it was submitted for publication.
Who or what inspired you to write this book? Lots of things: wolves, knives, New York City, my sister, my ex-loves, moonlight, starlight, California, gardens, valleys, deserts, history, prayer, waiting, watching, running away, returning home, the Pacific Coast, the longest war, guns, and wonder.
What else about your book might pique the reader's interest? There’s a poem in the book written from the point of view of train tracks. And another one written from the point of view of a sunrise. Those are cool.
Up next! Fellow poets Cathy Linh Che and Eugenia Leigh will be answering these questions on their blogs in the coming week. Stay tuned!
2 readings in LA - Feb 25 and Feb 26
Hi folks. Two upcoming readings with Red Hen Press in the LA area - hope you can make it! Mon, Feb 25 at the Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica and Tues, Feb 26 at the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena.
Interview in new issue of Hyphen Magazine
"This poem arrived at one of the oddest moments. I was in a hostel in Seville and I couldn't sleep because of the pressing summer heat. I didn't want to turn on the light and disturb my roommate, so I started writing in the dark..." [continue reading]
2012 Diode Editions Chapbook Contest
Good news - Traci Brimhall and I were the winners of the 2012 Diode Editions Chapbook Contest, with our co-written chapbook, Bright Power, Dark Peace.
The Poetry Show on KUSP Radio
Catherine Segurson, founding editor of the Catamaran Literary Reader, and I were interviewed on The Poetry Show in Santa Cruz, CA. Thank you, Catamaran and radio show host, Dennis Morton.