Jon Pineda

Jon Pineda (born Charleston, South Carolina) is an American poet, memoirist, and novelist.

Life

Jon Pineda was raised in Chesapeake, Virginia. He graduated from James Madison University and Virginia Commonwealth University.

His work has appeared in Poetry Northwest, The Literary Review, Sou'wester, Prairie Schooner,[1] Many Mountains Moving, Asian Pacific American Journal, Puerto del Sol, and elsewhere.

He is the author of the novel Apology, winner of the 2013 Milkweed National Fiction Prize. His memoir Sleep in Me was a 2010 Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection. His poetry collections include Little Anodynes, winner of the 2016 Library of Virginia Literary Award for Poetry,[2] The Translator's Diary, winner of the 2007 Green Rose Prize for Poetry from New Issues Press, and Birthmark, first-place winner in the 2003 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition Awards.

He currently teaches in the low-residency MFA program at Queens University of Charlotte[3] and is a member of the creative writing faculty at the University of Mary Washington.

Awards

Books

Individual Works

Anthologies

Reviews

Pineda is never obvious, cloying or clichéd, and the intensely felt personal material never overshadows the artist's attention to effects of sound, rhythm, and the nuances of line in this remarkable poetry. His book is a brave and beautiful one. Confronting his personal past with exquisite forms and lines, he shows us that art can help us survive, and master, the chaos of experience.[5]
[Pineda's] muted, lyrical messages, to be savored at length, remind us of the value of listening deeply, to ourselves and others.[6]
This hauntingly poetic first novel about mistakes, love, and sacrifice... Reminiscent of Alessandro Baricco's SILK, this novel will appeal to lovers of literary fiction.[7]
Incessant editing is something that comes from Pineda’s poetry background. So too is the way he tells the story—in a long line of tiny, imagistic scenes that often focus attention on small things going on in the background. The resultant prose is tight and stretched over the lean frame of a book weighing in at just under 200 pages. But those pages pack a punch.[8]

References

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