@ahundredrobins
1470: Common Denominators by Cynthia Arrieu-King | The Slowdown
1470: Common Denominators by Cynthia Arrieu-King | The Slowdown
Today’s poem is Common Denominators by Cynthia Arrieu-King.
American Poetry Review – Poems
American Poetry Review – Poems
Published in American Poetry Review - Volume 55 | No. 01
All my Chameleon Signals by Corinna Berndt (with text collaboration btwn CB and CAK))
All my Chameleon Signals by Corinna Berndt (with text collaboration btwn CB and CAK))
The Last Word on Spotify
Podcast
·
Podcast
The Last Word on Spotify
The Betweens, Noemi Press 2021
The Betweens, Noemi Press 2021
In The Betweens, Arrieu-King builds an experimental memoir from prose blocks: ones about microaggressions, scientific facts, as well as metaphors from art, history, and textile arts. In this book of lyric prose, those caught between two cultures can see their negotiation of the two build over time into something beyond…
Continuity, Octopus Books 2021
Continuity, Octopus Books 2021
Paperback, 77 pages “Cynthia Arrieu-King’s beautiful new book manages to feel written on the occasion of both a birth and a death, and perhaps it means to remind us that the passage of time necessitates both, as it brims with energy and elegy at once. I love the urge and pull of her richly textured
Futureless Languages, Radiator Press 2018
Futureless Languages, Radiator Press 2018
Manifest, winner of the Gatewood Prize selected by Harryette Mullen 2011
Manifest, winner of the Gatewood Prize selected by Harryette Mullen 2011
People Are Tiny in Paintings of China, Octopus Books 2010
People Are Tiny in Paintings of China, Octopus Books 2010
Cynthia Arrieu-King website
Cynthia Arrieu-King website
Roads Impassable, short story
Roads Impassable, short story
Boxes, short story by Cindy Arrieu-King
Boxes, short story by Cindy Arrieu-King
Franny, short story
Franny, short story
Lantern Review: Asian American Poetry Collections for 2021
Lantern Review: Asian American Poetry Collections for 2021
Review of Brandon Shimoda's The Grave on the Wall
Review of Brandon Shimoda's The Grave on the Wall
Brandon Shimoda’s experimental memoir The Grave on the Wall builds itself around his search for his grandfather, Midori. Using passages from filmmaker Akira
On Rainer Marie Rilke's The Man Watching
On Rainer Marie Rilke's The Man Watching
View on mobile
Explore other Linktrees
arianagrande
@arianagrande
morepurposepod
@morepurposepod
Heather Traska
@heathertraska
Ashe
@ashemusic
Ken Eurich
@keneurich
TMG Studios
@tmgstudios
zoltancomedy
@zoltancomedy
Sofia Tilbury
@sofiatilbury
Julian Sewell
@juliansewell
Alli Weatherly
@alliweatherly
previous
next
Discover more
See all
@rubianecherobin
@keripikpisang116wnsb
@zurstrass
@Andrea_info
@stevenhendrx
@mrhirostore
@CompreVillanik
@bardomael
@xeoxdj
@haberderm
@quill.pen
@CityMakeItHappen
@armandobarcenas
@usebaobba
@eduardateixeiraestetica
@LearnIA
@illusbyhana
@sandforlifejewels
@mustafaaffouri
@mariahmedeyer
@Melinah0dgee
@escoteiros_gr166
@Ijenestate
@PML_LOKO
@tokki_vt
@Djworldwide
@dungeons.dragons.diversity
@cravatte.estudio
@grexaliliana
@VC.Lore
@MercedesRaee
@Eletromaki
@PullmanSanMartin
@toastykeebs
@kushsinghproperty
@bradenrix
@studiobeatlab
@sotintasoficial1
@truenorthproductions
@your2bestfriendsabroad
@freestylepercussion
@Mighty.Bookworms
@airhockey
@junkersshahalam
@ictunito