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   Book Info

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Blues and Greens: A Produce Worker's Journal  
Author: Alan Chong Lau
ISBN: 0824823230
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From the Inside Flap
"In this sensuous, often witty book, one is struck from the first page onwards with how completely this poet lives a 'life considered.' No one I know writes with more sensitivity about the nature of life and work than Alan Lau, and few poets explore so honestly the nature of living in a community with others who have had to live complex and difficult lives."--Gail Tremblay "Filled with startling images, subtle insights, and true-to-life profundities, this long-awaited volume by this widely known and highly regarded, multifaceted artist will undoubtedly prove to be an event. It will speak to people interested in poetry, Asia, Asian America, the visual arts, multiculturalism, food, produce, sociological issues, commerce, spirituality, and just plain life in general."--Lawson Fusao Inada


About the Author
Alan Chong Lau was born in 1948 in Paradise, California. He received his B.A. in art from the University of California at Santa Cruz. He is co-author with Garrett Hongo and Lawson Inada of Buddha Bandits Down Highway 99 (1976) and author of Songs for Jadina (1980). His writing has appeared in many publications and anthologies. His paintings have been exhibited in the U.S., England and Japan.




Blues and Greens: A Produce Worker's Journal

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Alan Chong Lau's poetic memoir of his days as a produce worker in Seattle's Chinatown reveals a microcosm of grassroots, working-class Asian America-a world where customers, workers, and fruits and vegetables intersect in exchanges that crackle with energy and brim over with humor.

With the simple profundity of a Zen koan, the poems bear witness to people's humanity. Lau portrays in words and pictures a community in constant flux as it moves to the push and pull of immigration. Blues and Greens has a lot to say about Asian Americans. What emerges is an acutely observed, nuanced critique of where Asian Americans-native-born, refugee, and migrant-are today.QUOTES: "In this sensuous, often witty book, one is struck from the first page onward with how completely this poet lives a 'life considered.' No one I know writes with more sensitivity about the nature of life and work than Alan Lau, and few poets explore so honestly the nature of living in a community with others who have had to live complex and difficult lives."-Gail Tremblay

"Reading the poems of Alan Lau has been for me like coming unexpectedly upon a living green oasis when crossing a desert. Lau's poems speak for and embrace an entire people, a tragic century, and from his eloquence and modesty and compassion the identity of this fine poet comes to enduring life."-Kay Boyle

"Filled with startling images, subtle insights, and true-to-life profundities, this long-awaited volume by this widely known and highly regarded, multifaceted artist will undoubtedly prove to be an event. It will speak to people interested in poetry, Asia, Asian America, the visual arts, multiculturalism, food, produce, sociological issues, commerce, spirituality, and just plain life in general."-Lawson Fusao Inada

     



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