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Evocative, Funny and Heartbreaking: Chen Chen – “When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities”

22 May

ChenChenFurtherPossibilities
With April having been National Poetry Month, May being Asian Pacific American Heritage Month and June being LGBT History Month, I thought I’d share a book that intersects all of these themes. Presenting: Chen Chen’s “When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities.”

Whenever I express my love for poetry, I tend to get the same reaction every single time – a look of horror. It’s understandable why. In school, we are usually taught old, hard-to-read poems. The vocabulary is hard to grasp, it’s hard to relate to and there is a constant pressure to analyze, analyze, analyze. That’s enough to swear anyone off poetry.

But shunning all of poetry is a loss. Like music, there’s always something for everyone. Contemporary poetry is rising in popularity and thankfully there is a diverse group of poets that are leading the way, telling stories that would have been silenced or relegated to obscurity in the past, and opening doors for future voices to be heard.

In “When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities,” Chen Chen’s poems are evocative, funny and heartbreaking. Here’s an excerpt from the title poem:

To be a good
ex/current friend for R. To be one last

inspired way to get back at R. To be relationship
advice for L. To be advice

for my mother. To be a more comfortable
hospital bed for my mother. To be

no more hospital beds. To be, in my spare time,
America for my uncle, who wants to be China

for me. To be a country of trafficless roads
& a sports car for my aunt, who likes to go

fast. To be a cyclone
of laughter when my parents say

their new coworker is like that, they can tell
because he wears pink socks, see, you don’t, so you can’t,

can’t be one of them. To be the one
my parents raised me to be—

a season from the planet
of planet-sized storms.

Chen Chen writes beautifully about love, family, rejection, as well as queer and Asian American experiences. “When I Grow Up” is an accessible and well-written collection that not only acts as a good introduction to contemporary poetry, but has the ability to reach out to those who may feel invisible due to their race, sexuality, or other characteristic they feel defines them.

Besides being available in print from the Hoboken Library, Hoboken resident library card holders can borrow an ebook copy from Hoopla!

Do you have a favorite poet or book of poems?  Let us know in the comments!

Written by:
Samantha Evaristo

Women in Music: Musgraves, Mitski, and Marina

27 Mar

I have been a music enthusiast for a long time, so I must confess that I have been tracking all the songs I have listened to since 2005(!). The great thing about that is that I can follow changes in my listening habits and taste through time. One interesting pattern I’ve noticed is that I have shifted from listening to bands mostly fronted by men to a diverse range of female artists. In fact, my top 10 last year was almost exclusively female!

And so with that, I’d like to celebrate Women’s History Month by sharing with you a few albums by women that I really love.

Kacey Musgraves – “Golden Hour”
Golden Hour
You may have heard of this album if you pay any attention to the Grammys. I usually don’t, but I was very pleased to hear it had won Album of the Year, which it absolutely deserved. It was definitely my top album of 2018! I don’t usually listen to country music, but I had heard praise from other artists about it, so I decided to check it out. I am so glad I did. “Golden Hour” is a beautiful album, with soundscapes that remind me of spring, of looking up at cherry blossoms against a blue sky. It’s an album about appreciating love and the beauty of the world, as well as a reminder that our time on this earth is fleeting. Just like cherry blossoms! If you’re not a fan of country, fear not. “Golden Hour” veers slightly toward a pop sound, without sounding forced or cheesy.

Standout tracks: “High Horse”, “Oh What a World”, “Butterflies”  Hoboken Card Holders stream them now on Hoopla.

Mitski – “Puberty 2”
Mitski
Let’s move on to rock. Last year, Mitski made a buzz with her new album “Be the Cowboy”. I instantly became addicted to it, with its short, insanely catchy tunes. I had heard of Mitski before, but I had not been able to really get into her music. After “Be the Cowboy”, I decided to go through her back catalog and give her old stuff another chance. A great decision!

Puberty 2” was released in 2016 and has a much more raw rock sound. What I love the most about Mitski is her incredible songwriting. In the opening track, “Happy” she personifies the feeling of happiness, who comes to visit her and “brought cookies along the way”. After the first chorus, Mitski sings:

I was in the bathroom / I didn’t hear him leave / I locked the door behind him and I turned around to see / All the cookie wrappers and the empty cups of tea / Well I sighed and mumbled to myself / Again I have to clean

I found the imagery delightful. You can find lyrics like these all throughout the album. Here’s another example from the final track “A Burning Hill”

I am a forest fire / And I am the fire and I am the forest / And I am a witness watching it

Add to that loud guitars and haunting melodies, and you have yourself an album worthy of the repeat button. Don’t be like me. Give it the good listen it deserves the first time around!

Standout tracks: “Your Best American Girl”, “I Bet on Losing Dogs”, “Happy”

Marina and the Diamonds – “Froot”
Froot
Coincidentally, this album also opens with a track titled “Happy”. Whereas Mitski lamented the fact that Happy had left her, Marina welcomes its arrival at last. Marina (who has dropped “and the Diamonds” from her name this year) is a talented pop artist, with a heavenly voice and astute songwriting. While awaiting her new release later this year, I have been revisiting “Froot”, her album from 2015. Compared to her previous work, it’s a bit more reflective, so if you’re looking for a dose of catchy pop, without it being too saccharine or mainstream, this is the album for you. Her ballads are gorgeous and her upbeat tracks will have you singing along in the shower. Seriously, try not to sing along to “Froot”, with its groovy beats and clever wordplay, I dare you!

Standout tracks: “Froot”, “Blue”, “Savages”  Check out the digital album from Hoopla.

You can also check out more music by powerful women recommended by our fellow BCCLS librarian on the BCCLS Read, Watch, Listen blog.

What are your favorite albums by women?  Let us know in the comments!

Written by:
Samantha Evaristo
Library Outreach Assistant