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Melete [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x12 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780377576
  • ISBN-13: 9781780377575
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x12 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780377576
  • ISBN-13: 9781780377575
Teised raamatud teemal:
Jennifer Lee Tsais first full-length poetry book is a compelling narrative exploring family history, intergenerational trauma, love, loss, migration and belonging from the perspective of a second-generation British Chinese identity.  Melete interweaves dual cultures and heritages, moving from China and Hong Kong to Liverpool.



The mythic structure of the book relates to the three original Boeotian Muses Melete, Mneme and Aoede. Named after the Muse of meditation and contemplation, Melete navigates the boundaries between life and art, personhood and subjectivity, states and places of spiritual transcendence. 



This expansive book establishes a powerfully distinctive lyric voice in British poetry.

Arvustused

Rooted in Liverpool yet haunted by Canton, Hong Kong and the villages of the Hakka diaspora, these poems braid family myth with political history, from famine and migration to race riots and pandemic violence. The pages move between the intimate and the collective, exploring inheritance as Jennifer Lee Tsai revises the tradition to update it to our moment, revising how we speak. What is the deep urgency, necessity here? The act of writing becomes a correction, a ritual for justice, rebirth. The language itself enacts fragmentation, reconstruction. The sound becomes meaning, a longing is embedded in phonetics. This is a diaspora poetics, yes, but one that elevates personal trauma into archetype without losing specificity the lover becomes Minotaur, the speaker Ariadne. The book gives us a generous abundance of visually arresting images that are both memorable and cinematic. This is an impressive debut. -- Ilya Kaminsky Jennifer Lee Tsais poetry gives us a crystalline language for loss, silence and memory, where breaking stabilitieslike phonetic entities make complex the lyric fractals of familial love, violence and desire. The tremendous force of her linguistic authority here reclaims fragments of narratives of otherness, exile and shame to offer a self in movement, a voice fired by discovery. -- Sandeep Parmar Jennifer Lee Tsai is a great find, balancing a certain lightness of touch with a questing, plainspoken sincerity. She uses her imagery delicately and well, with irony the overall atmosphere of her work is one of effortless mobility and freedom, never dragging the reader down. The poems set in Hong Kong are standouts -- Bidisha * The Poetry Review * These extraordinary poems stage a reckoning a woman refusing the labels imposed upon her and naming herself Melete, asserting her right to forge her own identity. They speak powerfully against exoticism, stereotyping, and the manifold forms of racism experienced by the Chinese in Britain. At the same time, they enact the Chinese tenet of ancestral veneration, animating the distinct presences of forebears and honouring the multiple roots from China and within England itself through which the speaker comes into being. This is a fierce and intelligent collection, threaded with moments of ars poetica, in which writing becomes a means of inscribing the self into voice. -- Hannah Lowe Powerful and distinct, Jennifers poems weave historical and personal trauma into a vivid, striking exploration of family, heritage, and personhood. Her work balances emotional depth, clarity, and sharp wit. At times meditative and lyrical, at others bold and incisive, Jennifer offers poetry that is both intimate and resonant. -- Romalyn Ante Kismet explores with sensitivity the gaps between generations, cultures and belief systemswe encounter versions of femininity that defy stereotypesFilled with darkness and hope, Kismet conjures a world where the divide between the living and the dead becomes indistinct, where inner strength and love can transcend fears and bring healing. -- Jennifer Wong * The Poetry Review * A central challenge for Lee Tsai in La Mystérique is how a persons selfhood may be known in the face of denial. Exploring her familys narratives of migration...Lee Tsai questions the forces and absences which shape both their journeys and the recording of their lives. -- alice hiller * Poetry London *

I MELETE PRACTICE / THOUGHT
10 Three Muses
11 Preface for Melete
13 Who is Melete?
16 Where does Melete live?
18 Notes towards a race riot
20 Outpour
21 On being British
22 Reflections
24 The Sleepers Muse
25 An Old Flame
26 Being the Other
28 Sleeping with the devil incarnate
30 Rebirth
32 Meletes meditations
38 Music Practice
40 Ritual Bridge, White Clouds Monastery
41 Desires
42 Moth Orchid
44 The recuperation of fragments
46 St Andrews
47 The Artist
48 The Yellow Woman

II MNEME MEMORY / REMEMBRANCE
53 Breathing
54 Origins
56 Risk
57 I remember
58 Ancestors
60 South China Tiger
62 Tso Kin Tsai
64 The Age of Innocence
66 Why?
67 Kuk Po
68 The New Territories
69 Last night
70 1961
72 About Chinese Women
76 Fallen Star
78 Kismet
80 Going Home
82 Between Two Worlds
84 Tomb Sweeping Festival
85 Love Token
86 A Fisherman Prays in Twilight
88 Swallows
89 The Meaning of Names
90 Mossley Hill, South Liverpool
92 Things Ive broken

III AOEDE SONG / VOICE
96 British Chinese Girl
98 Discourse on the longing of language
99 Self-portrait at Four Years Old
100 Wild Horses
102 Another Language
103 Mersey River
104 Black Star
105 A Certain Purity of Light
108 Flower
109 Syncope
110 La Mystérique
112 Litanies of the Moons First Quarters
113 The Pendant
114 Dama de Noche
115 Vivien Leighs négligée
118 Christmas Eve
119 A Prayer for My Grandmother
120 Fantasia
121 Liverpool
123 British Chinese/East and Southeast Asian Citizen
132 The Golden Phoenix
134 I write the orange
136 Nightfall
138 Façade

140 Notes
143 Acknowledgements
Jennifer Lee Tsai is a poet, writer and artist. Born in Bebington on the Wirral, she grew up in Liverpool. She has published two pamphlets, Kismet (ignitionpress, 2019) and La Mystérique (Guillemot Press, 2022), with her first book-length collection, Melete, published by Bloodaxe in 2026. A fellow of The Complete Works and a Ledbury Poetry Critic, she has received a Northern Writers Award for Poetry and is a winner of the Rebecca Swift Foundations Women Poets Prize. She has worked as a teacher of English to students in universities and colleges as well as within community settings. She is the recipient of an AHRC doctoral scholarship in Creative Writing at the University of Liverpool and an Artist in Residence at the Bluecoats studios through the Wittenham Bursary. Her poetry, essays and reviews have been published in publications including The Guardian, The Poetry Review, Poetry London, The Telegraph, The TLS and The White Review as well as on BBC Radio 4.