®

Today's poem is "White Rabbit"
from As She Appears

YesYes Books

Shelley Wong is the author of As She Appears (YesYes Books), winner of the Pamet River Prize and longlisted for the 2022 National Book Award. She lives in San Francisco.

Other poems by Shelley Wong in Verse Daily:
November 6, 2017:   "Invitation with Dirty Hands" "In the blue house, my table examines..."

Books by Shelley Wong:

Other poems on the web by Shelley Wong:
"Epithalamium"
"Softer, Softest"
Three poems
"Self-Portrait as Frida Kahlo"

Shelley Wong's Website.

Shelley Wong on Twitter.

About As She Appears:

"'As a girl, I never / saw a woman / who looked like me,' Shelley Wong writes in this steadfast and assured debut, 'I had to invent her.' And it's this very faith in self-manifestation that makes these poems accrue towards bold, prescient, and lasting architectures of being and feeling; they not only depict but think themselves into existence, which make them more than the sum of their parts, more than just an invention of 'hers' or 'womanhood,' but a quietly profound indictment of contemporary culture. And yet, what's most indelible about Wong's circumventing and vexed forays into the big questions, is her careful and tender rendering of our joys."
—Ocean Vuong

"As She Appears is visionary in more than one sense. It's a riveting exploration of how one's sense of self—not just as the perceived, but also as perceiver—is affected by the way one is represented, or not represented. Shelley Wong's poems are heady, frank, kaleidoscopic, refractive, sensual, wondrous. They unsettle the distinctions we assume we can make between viewers—whether voyeur, consumer, spectator, or witness. I found myself wanting to linger in their pleasures and challenges."
—Mary Szybist

"It is the rare first book that arrives fully voiced, but in Shelley Wong's As She Appears, we enter these pages escorted by a steady hand at the small of the back, a mouth carefully placed just beneath our ear, the warmth of the body realized beside us in each fierce and tender poem of queer womanhood. These poems are haunted by the living, by the most vital impulses among us: to love, to be present, to declare the self. And in these declarations lies a femme heaven where we wander through poem after poem, each more lush and invigorating in their insistence. This is the book I've been waiting for all my life, and I have known for years that Wong would be the one to deliver it. I want to live inside its pages, take comfort as I wrap myself in its words. As Wong writes, 'We are the new names, / the ones we've always known.' When I read this book, I am every quiet queer girl with a desperate crush on the world."
—Keetje Kuipers

"In this tender debut, Shelley Wong contemplates the geographic, social, and bodily terrains of womanhood after the end of a relationship. Wong moves as seamlessly through the landscapes of a California marked by fire, an island populated with both non-native and invasive species, and the tidal waves of the ocean, to the interior spaces of a museum, the intimate vulnerabilities of a person discovering their mettle. 'As a girl,' the speaker tells us, 'I never // saw a woman / who looked like me. // I had to invent her. / I'm inventing her,' and this quietly daring collection reveals how to find oneself, how to be seen, invoking powerful women along the way: Beyoncé, Lucy Liu, Frida Kahlo, Madonna, and Whitney Houston. It is through these invocations, meditations, and encounters with both the brilliant worlds of flora and fauna (most notably, a motherless fawn), that the speaker can firmly say 'I choose myself' and take the reins of her own agency: 'But I am // no lady-in-waiting. / I gather the bouquet // myself.' Never have I traveled on such a gentle but strengthened path."
—Diana Khoi Nguyen



Support Verse Daily
Sponsor Verse Daily!

Home 
Archives  Web Weekly Features  Support Verse Daily  About Verse Daily  FAQs  Submit to Verse Daily  Follow Verse Daily on Twitter

Copyright © 2002-2022 Verse Daily All Rights Reserved