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18+ Works 439 Members 14 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Kimiko Hahn is the author of ten collections of poems. Her honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, a PEN/Voelcker Award, and a Theodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize. A distinguished professor at Queens College, City University of New York, she lives in Queens.

Includes the name: Kamiko Hahn

Image credit: Credit: David Shankbone, Sept. 2007

Works by Kimiko Hahn

The Narrow Road to the Interior: Poems (2006) 62 copies, 1 review
Mosquito and Ant: Poems (1999) 50 copies, 1 review
Toxic Flora: Poems (2010) 45 copies, 3 reviews
The Artist's Daughter: Poems (2002) 39 copies, 2 reviews
The Unbearable Heart (1996) 34 copies, 1 review
Brain Fever: Poems (2014) 33 copies, 1 review
Foreign Bodies: Poems (2020) 31 copies, 3 reviews
Earshot (1992) 18 copies
Air Pocket (1988) 15 copies
Volatile (1999) 14 copies
Brood (Quarternote Chapbook Series) (2018) 9 copies, 1 review
The Ghost Forest: New and Selected Poems (2024) 5 copies, 1 review
TriQuarterly 122 (2005) 2 copies
Go Home! 1 copy

Associated Works

The Best American Poetry 1996 (1996) — Contributor — 184 copies, 1 review
Charlie Chan Is Dead: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Fiction (1993) — Contributor — 169 copies, 3 reviews
The Best American Poetry 2010 (2010) — Contributor — 132 copies, 4 reviews
Granta 127: Japan (2014) — Contributor — 130 copies, 2 reviews
The Colors of Nature: Culture, Identity, and the Natural World (2002) — Contributor — 101 copies, 1 review
On a Bed of Rice (1995) — Contributor — 80 copies
The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy Tales (2003) — Contributor — 70 copies, 1 review
Making More Waves: New Writing by Asian American Women (1997) — Contributor — 68 copies
Autumn: A Spiritual Biography of the Season (2004) — Contributor — 62 copies, 2 reviews
Go Home! (2018) — Contributor — 59 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
There is no American poet like Kimiko Hahn. Her insight, her fearlessness, her exacting, beautiful language that spares no thing or no one, especially not herself. I cannot say enough how extraordinary I find her.
The exquisitely beautiful cover, and the enticing title persuaded me to pick up Toxic flora. Poems by Kimiko Hahn. However, her poetry in this collection was a disappointment.

The poems in this collection are written in free verse. The tone of most poems is harsh, lacking lyrical quality. The author has declared that she used the science section of the New York Times for inspiration, but reading the poems it seems as if she is a stranger to field of natural history, and has not sufficiently show more internalized the dynamic of the natural world. The poems therefore remain mechanical and lack passion.

In a broader sense, the poems do not seem to speak from the heart. In the balance, it seems frustrations are more prominent than the more usual emotions, such as love. Instead, it seems the author has appropriated the language of nature to express her own human frustrations.

Personally, I am not charmed by poetry with expletives, and the repeated use of fcuk and fcuk off.
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I love what Hahn does in this collection; she takes science articles from newspapers and journals and writes poems inspired from those that catch her attention. These aren't just a reiteration of some of the facts she found fascinating, but reflections on these facts which she connects to the human experience and sometimes to her own life. The first half of the poems she has here tend to be scientific or factual; then they proceed to making a connection to human life as a whole or a personal show more experience. Her poems have a playful, yet meditative tone. Some recurring themes are the relationship between parents and daughters, mating and courtship, adaption and survival, and the impact humans have on nature. The natural imagery is beautiful and her lines pack a punch. You have to do a little research of course, to understand the scientific terms if you're not familiar with them, but that's alright; the articles are cited at the back of the book. show less
My interest in Hahn's Toxic Flora stems from my own obsession with the intersection of science & poetry. These are pleasing, well-crafted lyric poems. Nothing too adventurous in terms of form or language. Some interesting twists on insect cannibalistic mating habits & edgy mother-daughter relationships.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
18
Also by
19
Members
439
Popularity
#55,771
Rating
3.8
Reviews
14
ISBNs
34
Favorited
1

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