The River of Heaven was awarded the 1987 Lamont Poetry Prize of the
Academy of American Poets for a distinguished second book of poems
(judges: Philip Booth, Alfred Corn, Mary Oliver). In it Garrett Hongo
has drawn from his unusual background (born in Volcano, Hawaii, of
Japanese ancestry, and educated in California at Pomona) to provide the
materials for poems that would be highly exotic were they not infused
with a level-headed sense of realism and a strong feeling that mundane
realities are perfectly natural material for the poetry of our time.
Here, Garrett Hongo transforms his mundane realities into elegant
poetry. The volcanoes of Hawaii, the gritty urban streets of Los
Angeles, a California beach after the death of his father--the places of
Garrett Hongo's past metamorphose into a poetry that is compelling and
immediate.