Ocean Vuong is the author of the critically acclaimed poetry collection Night Sky with Exit Wounds and the New York Times bestselling novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous. A recipient of the 2019 MacArthur “Genius Grant,” he is also the winner of the Whiting Award and the T. S. Eliot Prize. His writings have also been featured in The Atlantic, Harper’s, The Nation, The New Republic, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. Born in Saigon, Vietnam, he currently splits his time between western Massachusetts and New York City.
“In this highly anticipated second poetry collection, Ocean Vuong
ruminates on time. It becomes a character of its own, both an
obstacle and motherly, something that can nurture and hold. Written
in the aftermath of his mother’s death, Vuong’s poems are raw with
grief and darkness, but there are radical moments of joy and
resilience even through that. Through these poems, Vuong sings loud
and clear of everything worth living for and discovering—just as
vividly as he did in his critically acclaimed titles On Earth We’re
Briefly Gorgeous and Night Sky With Exit Wounds.” —NPR, “Books
We Love”
“Piercing . . . The poems in Time Is a Mother give us a path to
examine the complexities of what it means to lose a mother, and
what it means to embrace family and the self even when we want to
look away. In Vuong’s tender yet unflinching words, we are reminded
that only a mother can carry a beating heart within her body.” —Los
Angeles Review of Books
“Like Orpheus descending into the underworld, Vuong takes us to the
white-hot limits of his grief, writing with visionary fervor about
love, agony, and time . . . Aesthetically ambitious and ferociously
original . . . Here, he breaks open and rebuilds.” —Esquire, “The
Best Books of Spring 2022”
“That’s the essence of Vuong’s talent: he alchemizes deeply
individual experiences with universal emotions into what is both
familiar and new. . . . We need no more proof of Vuong’s importance
in the poetic canon.” —Chicago Review of Books
“An ode to his mother’s passing, Vuong orbits the contours of
grief. . . . the poet’s linguistic ferocity illuminates his
mother’s spirit from the rays of memory.” —Associated Press
“An undeniable voice, fiercely directed by a shaping
imagination as relentless as its raw material.” —Helen
Vendler, Liberties Journal of Culture and Politics
“Aesthetically complex yet emotionally accessible, Time is a Mother
at once innovates and affirms the existing poetic tradition. . . .
Vuong's portrait of Hồng is both intimate and iconic.” —NPR.org
“Time Is a Mother builds on the themes of [Vuong’s] previous books,
displaying a new degree of precision and elegant power. . . . Time
Is a Mother offers a reckoning with the many versions of ourselves,
some altered by time and loss but still true, still open to more
life—as a long as we’re willing to risk the depths.” —Nashville
Scene
“Vuong’s powerful follow-up to Night Sky with Exit Wounds does more
than demonstrate poetic growth: it deepens and extends an
overarching project with 27 new poems that reckon with loss and
impermanence . . . This fantastic book will reward fans while
winning this distinctive poet new ones.” —Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
“[Vuong] focuses on the complicated relationship with his mother in
quiet, astonishing lyrics . . . Even the most ostensibly simple
moments prove mesmerizing in Vuong's treatment.” —Booklist (starred
review)
“Vuong’s second full-length poetry collection grapples with the
aftermath of his mother’s death in poems that memorably evoke the
stunning immensity of loss.” —Buzzfeed News, 26 Books to Get
Excited About This Year
“Tender and heartbreaking . . . this collection of poems
thoughtfully considers grief, both as an emotion and a sacred act,
revisiting the history he shared with his mother and the
understanding of family they forged together. Delving back into the
visceral themes that made his 2019 novel On Earth We’re Briefly
Gorgeous a revelation, Vuong traverses the intensely personal and
the broadly political with grace and courage.” —TIME, “The Most
Anticipated Books of 2022”
“These poems glisten and rattle, and they deftly mine a host of
diverse topics—sex, privilege, beauty, art, poverty, death—to offer
us a fresh way of evaluating and understanding our world. Vuong
expertly unwraps clichés and rewraps them in fresh packaging so we
can perceive their meanings anew. On each page he demonstrates that
untranslatable is a meaningless word. His poems say, We’re all
humans having human experiences. Let’s figure this all out
together.” —Vulture, “49 Books We Can’t Wait to Read in 2022”
“Ocean Vuong’s Time Is a Mother is haunting, inconsolable, and at
the same time a playful, generous in spirit, tender, inimitable
book. The poet’s late mother is these pages’ muse and guardian
spirit, as poem after poem Vuong redefines our idea of what an
elegy can do it, what it is for. But from all of this intersection
of tragedy and tenderness, true wisdom comes: Vuong teaches us not
just how to grieve, but how to live.” —Ilya Kaminsky, author of
Deaf Republic and Dancing in Odessa
“All of Ocean Vuong’s writing shows a masterful attention to
detail. He comes at language with a magnifying glass. He holds
words differently than everyone else, and when he hands them to
you, they are changed. . . . Dealing with the death of his mother,
this new book comes from a place of grief and memory, turning loss
over and over in a way that only this writer can.” —LitHub, “Most
Anticipated Books of 2022”
“Ocean Vuong’s sentences are like tiny icebergs: exquisite and
annihilating.” —Nylon, “24 Books We’re Looking Forward to in
2022”
“Among the most haunting in the collection is a poem that lists
items ordered from Amazon leading up to the death of his mother
from cancer, the last line—one pair of woolen socks—a singular
reminder that we come here alone and we die alone, regardless of
whether time nurtures us or not.” —Oprah Daily, “The 50 Most
Anticipated Books of 2022”
“Stories of personal loss are woven into vignettes and memories
that explore the most sweeping of subjects—addiction, racism, war,
death, family—with a gentle, modest touch and the occasional dose
of humor. So, too, does Vuong once again prove himself the rare
writer in whose hands experiments with form can become a thing of
beauty in and of themselves. . . . Indeed, for all his technical
prowess, the most striking thing about Vuong’s writing will always
be its warm, beating heart even in the face of life’s cruelties. .
. . It’s a body of work as hauntingly beautiful as it is ultimately
hopeful, and very possibly Vuong’s best yet.” —Vogue.com, “The Best
Books of 2022: A Preview”
“[A] stirring collection of poetry. [Vuong] experiments with
language and form while probing the aftermath of his mother’s death
and his determination to survive it. Take your time with these
poems, and return to them often.” —The Washington Post, “The
books to read in 2022 based on what you loved in 2021”
“Both Jarrett and Hess say this poetry collection, Vuong’s second,
should be on your radar in 2022. . . . ‘The poetry is just
incredible and so moving,’ Hess said. ‘Anyone can read it and cull
from it what they need from it at that time, which I love because
it really speaks to so many people across many aspects of life.’”
—Boston.com, “23 books to look out for in 2022, according to
local experts”
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