"Writing a poem is unwriting a knot, like untying a shoelace that is clubbing your foot."
"New formalism is writing with language as flow, like the flow from a dam, running through a desert that has had no rain for decades."
About the author
Shirley Geok-lin Lim
Poet, Novelist
Shirley Geok-lin Lim is a Malaysian Chinese author known for her poignant explorations of identity and cultural conflict in works like 'Among the White Moon Faces'.
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More quotes by Shirley Geok-lin Lim
"As a first-generation "Asian American woman," for one thing, I knew there was no such thing as an "Asian American woman." Within this homogenizing labeling of an exotica, I knew there were entire racial/national/cultural/sexual-preferenced groups, many of whom find each other as alien as mainstream America apparently finds me."
"Poetry must speak of others, in order to speak for the poet's imagination, in order to speak of itself; it is slowed down by poetics after its flight is over."
"As I grew older - and even when I was younger - it had puzzled me why I continued and continue to be heterosexual."
"I don't like crows. In the poem "C," crows are predatory, killing other birds and so forth. But in my morning walks, there were always crows, particularly at certain times of the year. And they're very aggressive, very visible and loud. They're not at all likable, but they have to be dealt with. They are part of the picture, the art in the morning. You cannot deny their reality."
"I was walking every morning, and I'd take my iPod and paper and pen. As I walked, I wrote a poem, and then I'd come home - and sometimes it's legible, sometimes not - I typed the poem up. So I have a new, yet to be published, collection of poems now. It's called Walker's Alphabet, and among other things, it is about walking. My most recent collection of poems in 2010, incidentally, was titled WALKING backwards."