Poems

Famously Beautiful City

rake

by V. Penelope Pelizzon

          For Nicole Cuddeback and Antonio Ambrosio

Thank Christ for outskirts, where the river pulls you
east or west beyond brilliance into the merely making do,
scrappy verges where the water eddies and people
unremarkably rake their gardens or tinker under cars.

Please, please let’s ignore the genius of the past today.

I need a walk with you along the margins where history’s only
years among friends and the only image of heaven
a glimpse of lemon trees beyond a rusty gate,
someone burning trash in a yard and whistling.

*Photo courtesy Piers Nye.

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The Lucky Ones, by Mae Ngai The Lucky Ones: One Family and the Extraordinary Invention of Chinese America by Mae Ngai Hyphenated cultures seem to be a natural part of California’s landscape today, but it wasn’t always so. The Lucky Ones by Mae Ngai offers a fresh look at California history by reconstructing the lives of immigrant and second generation pioneers who lived between cultures when it was not such a common phenomenon. Ngai’s narrative brings Chinese Americans into a richer tradition of historical storytelling by humanizing an ambivalent, middle-class immigrant family, situating their lives within the more well-known histories of Chinese laborers and those who suffered from the 1882 Exclusion Act.

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