Skip to main content
WHITING WHITING WHITING WHITING WHITING
  • Foundation ▼ ▲
    • Home
    • People
    • History
    • Contact
  • Literature ▼ ▲
    • Whiting Award
      • About
      • Current Winners
      • Browse Winners
      • Search All Winners
      • Keynotes
    • Nonfiction Grant
      • About
      • Grantees
    • Magazine Prizes
      • About
      • Winners
    • Discover Writing
      • New Books
      • Chapbooks
      • Videos
      • Random Winner
  • Humanities ▼ ▲
    • Preserving Heritage
    • High Schools
    • Past Programs
      • About
      • PEP Fellows
      • PEP Seed Grantees
      • Dissertation Fellows
Living Weapon
Poems

A revelation, a shoring up, a transposition: Rowan Ricardo Phillips’s Living Weapon is a love song to the imagination, a new blade of light honed in on our political moment. A winged man plummets from the troposphere; four NYPD officers enter a cellphone store; concrete sidewalks hang overhead. Here, in his third collection of poems, Phillips offers us ruminations on violins and violence, on hatred, on turning forty-three, even on the end of existence itself. Living Weapon reveals to us the limitations of our vocabulary, that our platitudes are not enough for the brutal times in which we find ourselves. But still, our lives go on, and these are poems of survival as much as they are an indictment.  

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
44 Poems for You

Playwright Sarah Ruhl’s first book of poetry offers poems that form a subtle, personal meditation on family, motherhood, and loss. With a finely tuned ear for language, Ruhl’s poetry sings with a humbling honesty about what it means to share our lives with others and with those who form our hollows: a miscarriage, a close friend lost to cancer, and the sublimity of nature. She delves into womanhood through the physical reality of the everyday, and shows us life through her hands―making terrariums or jam with her husband, holding a child, grasping the counter as she bleeds. Succinct and contemplative, generous and wise, Sarah Ruhl―one of the greatest contemporary playwrights working today―addresses these poems to you.  

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
The Lucky Star
A Novel

After being initiated into a coven of island witches, Neva begins to fulfill her fate in a Tenderloin dive bar. Her worshippers include Richard, the introverted, alcoholic, occasionally omniscient narrator; a profane, aggressive transgender sex worker named Shantelle; the brisk but motherly barmaid Francine; and the former Frank, who has renamed herself after her idol Judy Garland. When Judy starts to love Neva too much, Judy's retired policeman boyfriend embarks on a mission of exposure and destruction.

Crafted out of language by turns spiritual and sexually graphic, The Lucky Star aches with compassion as it explores celebrity culture, gender identity, incest, Christian sacrifice and, most of all, the quotidian and sometimes faltering heroism of marginalized people who in the face of humiliation and outright violence seek to love in their own way, and stand up for who they are.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
The Absurd Man
Poems

Inspired by Albert Camus’s seminal Myth of Sisyphus, Major Jackson’s fifth volume subtly configures the poet as “absurd hero” and plunges headfirst into a search for stable ground in an unstable world. We follow Jackson’s restless, vulnerable speaker as he ponders creation in the face of meaninglessness, chronicles an increasingly technological world and the difficulty of social and political unity, probes a failed marriage, and grieves his lost mother with a stunning, lucid lyricism.

The arc of a man emerges; he bravely confronts his past, including his betrayals and his mistakes, and questions who he is as a father, as a husband, as a son, and as a poet. With intense musicality and verve, The Absurd Man also faces outward, finding refuge in intellectual and sensuous passions. At once melancholic and jubilant, Jackson considers the journey of humanity, with all its foibles, as a sacred pattern of discovery reconciled by art and the imagination.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
Processed Cheese
A Novel

A bag of money drops out of the sky, literally, into the path of a cash-starved citizen named Graveyard. He carries it home to his wife, Ambience, and they embark on the adventure of their lives, finally able to have everything they've always deserved: cars, guns, games, jewels, clothes-and of course sex, travel, and time with friends and family. There is no limit except their imagination and the hours in the day, and even those seem to be subject to their control. 

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
The Revisionist & The Astropastorals
Collected Poems

Douglas Crase is best known for his invocations and revisions of Whitmanian transcendentalism. Out of print since 1987, his book The Revisionist has still been enough in some opinions to establish him as one of the most important poets of his generation; on its strength, says the Oxford Book of American Poetry, "rests a formidable underground reputation." By combining The Revisionist with Crase's chapbook The Astropastorals in a new collection, Nightboat Books presents his formidable reputation to a wider public for the first time in thirty-two years.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
To the Wren
Collected & New Poems

This collection houses Mead’s life’s work: seven books spanning twenty-seven years. Follow chronologically through decades and become captivated by heartfelt muses on loss, madness, danger, grief, isolation, and self-identity. Her poems explore the spaces we try to ignore, weaving together pain and joy until it meshes into glimpses of humanity.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
  • Indie Bound
  • Alice James Books
Thomas and Beal in the Midi
A Novel

Thomas Bayly and his wife, Beal, have run away to France, escaping the laws and prejudices of post-Reconstruction America. The drama in this richly textured novel proceeds in two settings: first in Paris, and then in the Languedoc, where Thomas and Beal begin a new life as winemakers. Beal, indelible, beautiful, and poised, enchants everyone she meets in this strange new land, including a gaggle of artists in the Latin Quarter when they first arrive in Paris. Later, when they’ve moved to the beautiful and rugged Languedoc, she is torn between the freedoms she experienced in Paris and the return to the farm life she thought she had left behind in America. A moving and delicate portrait of a highly unusual marriage, Thomas and Beal in the Midi is a work of deep insight and imagination about the central dilemma of American history―the legacy of slavery and the Civil War―that explores the many ways that the past has an enduring hold over the present.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
  • IndieBound
King of the Yees

For nearly 20 years, playwright Lauren Yee’s father Larry has been a driving force in the Yee Family Association, a seemingly obsolescent Chinese American men’s club formed 150 years ago in the wake of the Gold Rush. But when her father goes missing, Lauren must plunge into the rabbit hole of San Francisco Chinatown and confront a world both foreign and familiar. At once bitingly hilarious and heartbreakingly honest, King of the Yees is an epic joyride across cultural, national, and familial borders that explores what it truly means to be a Yee.

Premiere Year
2017
Premiere Theater
Goodman Theatre
Premiere City
Chicago, IL
Premiere Creative

Cast: Rammel Chan, Francis Jue, Angela Lin, Stephenie Soohyun Park, and Daniel Smith; Director: Joshua Kahan Brody

Major Production Year
2017
Major Production Theater
Center Theatre Group
Major Production City
Culver City, CA
Major Production Creative

Cast: Rammel Chan, Francis Jue, Angela Lin, Stephenie Soohyun Park, and Daniel Smith; Director: Joshua Kahan Brody

Major Production 2 Year
2019
Major Production 2 Theater
San Francisco Playhouse
Major Production 2 City
San Francisco, CA
Major Production 2 Creative

Cast: Rinabeth Apostol, Will Dao, Francis Jue, Julie Kuwabara, Bryan Munar, Krystle Piamonte, Jomar Tagatac, and Dennnis Yen; Director: Joshua Kahan Brody

Major Production 2 Date
January 16, 2019
  • Print Books
the spiders my arms

Deeply invested in landscape, the spiders my arms operates where landscape and language converge. It opens the page into a compositional field in which words appear as constellations to create multiple, interwoven meanings as they interact with each other and with the reader who moves freely among them, fully participating in the making of poems that are spatial, non-linear, and different every time.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
  • Small Press Distribution

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹‹
  • Page 22
  • Next page ››
Subscribe to M

Sitemap Menu

  • Foundation
    • Home
    • People
    • History
    • Contact
  • Literature
    • Whiting Award
    • Nonfiction Grant
    • Magazine Prizes
    • Discover Writing
  • Humanities
    • Preserving Heritage
    • High Schools
    • Past Programs




  • Accessibility Notice Accessibility Notice
  • PRIVACY & TERMS
  • © WHITING FOUNDATION
  •  
Site by PASTPRESENTFUTURE, with design by Language Arts