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The Marrow of Individual Experience and Disrupted Heritage : Malcolm St Hill Reviews ‘sing Out When You Want Me’ by Kerri Shying
2020
single work
review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , September no. 29 2020;
— Review of Sing Out When You Want Me Karen Kun (translator), 2017 selected work poetry'Kerri Shying is an Australian poet of Chinese and Wiradjuri heritage whose first collection, sing out when you want me, is one of the bilingual editions in the Pocket Poets Series by Flying Island Books. While physically small (it can literally fit in your pocket), the collection runs to 101 pages with 30 poems and matching Chinese translations by Karen Kun. These poems reflect the lived experience and as Shying said in an interview with Writing NSW, “it completely came out of my experience as a mixed-race woman and an insider/outsider in all kinds of ways.” The collection plays this out in city, rural and suburban settings and speaks powerfully of both private and public hurts.' (Introduction)
-
The Marrow of Individual Experience and Disrupted Heritage : Malcolm St Hill Reviews ‘sing Out When You Want Me’ by Kerri Shying
2020
single work
review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , September no. 29 2020;
— Review of Sing Out When You Want Me Karen Kun (translator), 2017 selected work poetry'Kerri Shying is an Australian poet of Chinese and Wiradjuri heritage whose first collection, sing out when you want me, is one of the bilingual editions in the Pocket Poets Series by Flying Island Books. While physically small (it can literally fit in your pocket), the collection runs to 101 pages with 30 poems and matching Chinese translations by Karen Kun. These poems reflect the lived experience and as Shying said in an interview with Writing NSW, “it completely came out of my experience as a mixed-race woman and an insider/outsider in all kinds of ways.” The collection plays this out in city, rural and suburban settings and speaks powerfully of both private and public hurts.' (Introduction)