Should You Lose All Reason(s)
By (Author) Justine Chan
Chin Music Press
Chin Music Press
17th August 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
811.6
Paperback
108
Width 228mm, Height 152mm, Spine 6mm
When Justine Chan worked as a park ranger at Zion National Park, she chose to retell a Southern Paiute folktale for her weekly evening program on coyotes. The more that long, hot summer unfolded, the more time she spent alone in the desert, the more she retold the story, the more the story became her life. And in that space, she began to write.
Should You Lose All Reason(s) is unafraid of looking hard back, down, towards, around, forward, at the stories we tell, at herself, at the desert, at the sun, at everything. In conversation with the Southern Paiute folktale, she weaves together a triptych of poems, poems both always on the move and stuck, in exile, in wilderness. Drawing from her experiences serving in AmeriCorps, working as a park ranger, and traveling across the United States, she explores race, loneliness, stories, hauntings, family, landscapes and cityscapes, climate change, survival, music, resilience, the West, and America itself.
At times scorching, at times brimming with awe and desire, this debut book of poems resonates with a brilliant new voice.
Justine Chan's long poetic narrative, Should You Lose All Reason(s), embraces a search for belonging in an American landscape and in an American family with linguistic force, passion, and love. People talk about identity all the time, but Chan shows us how to occupy it and hold it in your heart.
Shawn Wong
Tiffany Midge, author of The Woman Who Married a Bear
Jane Wong, author of How to Not Be Afraid of Everything
Greg Bem, author of Of Spray and Mist
francine j. harris, author of Here is the Sweet Hand
Justine Chan is a poet, writer, and singer-songwriter from Chicago. Her writing has appeared in Electric Literature, Baltimore Review, Beecher's, Booth, Poetry on Buses, Midwestern Gothic, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington and has worked many seasons as a park ranger with the National Park Service. She currently lives in Seattle.