Sunwoo Kim’s debut collection of poems,If My Tongue Refuses to Remain in My Mouth, appeared in 2000, declaring in the boldest terms that at the outset of the new millennium she would bring to the page a radically different conception of poetry. Central to her work is the belief that in what Lao Tzu calls “the world of ten thousand things” the poet reveals the manifold ways in which one thing is connected to another, her poetic self-expanding into the world even as the world flows into her. This interconnectedness marks a return to a maternal, communal, and ecological view of the human condition.
Sunwoo Kimhas published several books of nonfiction, four novels, and five books of poetry includingFalling Asleep Under Peach FlowersandA Nocturne. She has received the Modern Literary Award and the Cheong Sangbyung Poetry Award. She lives in Seoul.Won-Chung Kimis a professor of English Literature at Sungkyunkwan University where he teaches contemporary American poetry, ecological literature, and translation. He has publishedThe Dictionary of Cultural Literacyand co-edited East AsianEcocriticisms: A Critical Reader. He has translated ten books of Korean poetry. He lives in Seoul.Christopher Merrilldirects the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. He has published six collections of poetry, includingNecessitiesandWatch Fire, for which he received the Lavan Younger Poets Award from the Academy of American Poets; several edited volumes, among them, The Forgotten Language: Contemporary Poets and Nature; and five books of nonfiction, most recently,Things of the Hidden GodandThe Tree of the Doves. He lives in Iowa City, Iowa.