AUP New Poets 11
By (Author) Xiaole Zhan
By (author) Margo Montes de Oca
By (author) J. A. Vili
11
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
8th May 2025
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
104
Width 224mm, Height 164mm, Spine 8mm
Memoir, myth and critical theory weave through Xiaole Zhans essay-poem Arcadiana as they explore their Pkeh-Chinese family. Meanwhile, Margo Montes de Ocas intertidal combines rich, elemental imagery water, light, colour with a world of feeling and poetic homage. In an affecting conclusion, J. A. Vilis Poems Lost During the Void pays tribute to family and friends, reaching out beyond grief to show the beautiful intensity of community and connection.
AUP New Poets 11 introduces three distinctive and compelling voices to contemporary poetry.
AUP New Poets 11 introduces to the world three new poets whose work offers diverse visions of what poetry can be. Xiaole Zhans Arcadiana showcases an exciting new voice. Using the hybrid form of essay poetry, Zhan explores their cross-cultural family and childhood, weaving in broader themes including history, religion and music. The innovative and clever poems in Margo Montes de Ocas intertidal return to motifs of water, sleep, dreams, time including geological and evolutionary time and engage with the work of other writers, such as Virginia Woolf and Louise Glck. And, finally, J. A. Vili is a refreshing new voice whose poems span years. His heartfelt Poems Lost During the Void which deeply explore place and community, are often punning and playful, even while dealing with grief and loss. Helen Rickerby
Xiaole Zhan () is a Chinese-New Zealand writer and composer based in Naarm. They are the recipient of the 2024 Kat Muscat Fellowship. Awards include the Kill Your Darlings Creative Non-Fiction Essay Prize and the Charles Brasch Young Writers Essay Competition. Their work has appeared in Island, The Suburban Review, Landfall, Cordite Poetry Review, Going Down Swinging, Starling and Sweet Mammalian. Their name in Chinese is and means Little Happy but can also be read as Little Music.
Margo Montes de Oca is a poet and researcher of Mexican and Pkeh descent living in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. She holds degrees in English literature and in ecology and biodiversity. She was a 2024 Starling writer-in-residence at the New Zealand Young Writers Festival, and her poetry has been published in issues of Starling, Sweet Mammalian, bad apple, Minarets and Mayhem Literary Journal.
J. A. Vili is an Auckland-based poet of Samoan descent whose poetry often advocates for suicide prevention and mental illness support. He dedicates poems to friends and to his children who lost their mother at a young age. Vili holds a bachelor of creative writing. His poems have appeared in Ika journal and Katvei: Contemporary Pasifika Poetry from Aotearoa New Zealand (Massey University Press, 2024).