Fifty-four poems in verse and prose by New York writer John Yau, who has
been called "the most important Chinese-American poet of our time"
(MultiCultural Review).
Yau has distinguished himself by his resistance to conventional
discourse. This has taken Yau's work down some "startling
thoroughfares," as critic Edward Foster notes. "His ethnic background
marks him as an outsider in America, but he is not interested in merely
recording the terms of that exclusion. His work examines ways in which
language has long been used, quite often subtly, to oppress and
exclude."
Yau's conducts us across wastes of "cities . . . fluttering with lost
ghouls" to the place "inhibited shadows wait". As one of his narrators
say, "This, we tell ourselves, is the place where we must start."