Mong-Lan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mong Lan (b. 1970, Saigon, South Vietnam) is a Vietnamese-Asian-American poet, writer, painter, and photographer.

Contents

[edit] Life

Mong-Lan left her native Vietnam on the last day of evacuation of Saigon in 1975. She came to the United States with her family, and moved to and within the South, Southwest, and Mid-Plains regions before her family settled in Houston, Texas. She lived in San Francisco for a number of years and this influenced her writing. Presently, she lives in Tokyo, Japan.

[edit] Career

Of her poetry, Robert Creeley has commented, "Mông-Lan is a remarkably accomplished poet. Always her poems are deft, extremely graceful in the way words move, and in the cadence that carries them. One is moved by the articulate character of ‘things seen,’ the subtle shifting of images, and the quiet intensity of their information. Clearly she is a master of the art."

Mong-Lan's first book of poems, Song of the Cicadas (University of Massachusetts Press, 2001) won the Juniper Prize, the Great Lakes Colleges Association's New Writers Awards for Poetry, and was a finalist for the Poetry Society of America's Norma Farber First Book Award. Her second book of poems is Why is the Edge Always Windy? (Tupelo Press, 2005). She received her Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Arizona, was the recipient of a Wallace E. Stegner Fellowship in poetry for two years at Stanford University, and was a Fulbright Grantee in Vietnam. Her poetry has been anthologized in Best American Poetry, the Pushcart Prize Anthology, Making More Waves: New Writing by Asian American Women; Watermark: Vietnamese American Poetry and Prose; and Asian American Anthology—The Next Generation; and has appeared in numerous leading American literary journals such as The Kenyon Review, The Antioch Review, and the North American Review.

Her paintings and photographs have been exhibited in galleries in the San Francisco Bay Area, the Capitol House in Washington D.C., for one year, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, in Tokyo, Japan, and at the Dallas Museum of Art.

Mong-Lan has read her poetry and presented slides of her artworks at many universities and festivals/workshops in a number of countries to include Buenos Aires, Argentina; the World Poetry Festival in Heidelberg, Germany; Lavigny, Switzerland; Fukuoka, Nagoya, and Tokyo, Japan; and in the U.S. to include: Harvard University, Stanford University, San Francisco State University, University of Nevada, VA Festival of the Book, University of Maryland University College, SUNY Purchase, Kenyon College, DePauw University, Hope College, the Asia Society in NYC, and the Poetry Society of America's Festival for New Poets. She has taught at the University of Arizona, Stanford University, the Dallas Museum of Art, the San Diego State University Writers' Conference and currently teaches in the Asian Division of the University of Maryland University College in Tokyo, Japan.

[edit] Honors

  • Juniper Prize, for Song of the Cicadas
  • Great Lakes Colleges Association's New Writers Awards for Poetry, for Song of the Cicadas
  • Poetry Society of America's Norma Farber First Book Award, Finalist, for Song of the Cicadas
  • Pushcart Prize, inclusion in Pushcart Book of Poetry: Best Poems from 30 Years of the Pushcart Prize, 2006.
  • Inaugural Visual Artist and Poet in Resident at the Dallas Museum of Art, through a National Endowment for the Arts Grant.
  • Fulbright Grant to Vietnam

[edit] External links