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  • Home
  • About
    • Our Teachers
    • Our Faculty Assistants
    • Contact us
    • Careers
    • Parent Information
  • Program Info
    • Speech Arts
    • Book Clubs
    • Writers' Room
    • Festival Group Class
    • Student Leadership Opportunities
  • Registration
    • Term Information
    • Summer 2025 Registration
    • RCM & Trinity Exams
  • Beyond the Classroom
    • Contests & Challenges
    • External Opportunities
    • Featured Student Works
    • Our Diverse Voices
    • Recommended Reads

  BASA

Hiroshima By Sarah Kay (Grades 10+)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Hiroshima By Sarah Kay

Sarah Kay is a Japanese and American poet born in New York in 1988. She started writing poetry around the age of 14. Sarah primarily makes spoken word poetry and is known worldwide for her famous slam poems. She dedicated a non-profit to using slam poetry as an educational tool. Through the heartbreaking words of Kay, she motivated people to be more like themselves and to accept what comes with being a woman. She attended Brown University and got her Master of Arts degree. Her piece Hiroshima uses the tragedies of this land to talk about human experiences, loss, and endorsement.

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The Bonesetter's Daughter By Amy Tan (Grades 7-9)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about The Bonesetter's Daughter By Amy Tan

Amy Tan was born in California to Chinese immigrants. When she was 15, her elder brother and father died due to brain tumours, leaving her, her mother, and her younger brother. Tan had a difficult relationship with her mother, which ended up being the basis of many of her novels such as her first novel, Joy Luck Club. The Bonesetter’s Daughter tells the story of Ruth in the first half of the book, who is having to deal with her mother who is seemingly getting more demented, her boyfriend and his two daughters, and her work as a ghostwriter for self-help books. The other half of the book recounts the story of Ruth’s mother, Lu Ling, and her past. Through this, Ruth finally understands the roots of her mother’s seemingly erratic behaviours.

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When You Trap a Tiger By Tae Keller (Grades 5-6)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about When You Trap a Tiger By Tae Keller

"When You Trap a Tiger" is a children's fiction book addressing many themes including family history, identity, loss and LGBTQ+. Lily, the protagonist move in with her sick grandmother and soon faces a magical tiger from her halmoni's Koream folktales. Lily must find her courage and her voice to face this tiger and truly understand her family history. This book has won the 2021 John Newbery Medal and the Asian/Pacific American Award for Children's Literature. Tae Keller grew up in Honolulu, Hawaii and now lives in Seattle. She continues to explore the many themes regarding identity, biraciality and girls trying to find their voices.

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My Day with Gong Gong By Sennah Yee (Grades 1-3)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about My Day with Gong Gong By Sennah Yee

"My Day with Gong Gong" is a children's picture book written by Sennah Yee and illustrated by Elaine Chen. The book follows the day of a little girl and her grandpa in Chinatown. She becomes bored, but her day flips when she creates a connection with her grandpa. He does not speak much english and May cannot understand Chinese. Just when May feels like she is being excluded from him and his friends, he surprises May with a gift that shows that he has been paying more attention than she thinks she is. This adorable and charming book captures the small moments of life in the city and proves that small, shared moments of care, love, and patience can bridge the gap of generations and cultures. Sennah Yee is writer from Toronto where she writes poems, prose, and film criticism. She is also the co-creator and managing editor of the pop culture journal "In The Mood Magazine".

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Big Clock By Li Young Lee (Grades 10+)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Big Clock By Li Young Lee

Li-Young Lee was born in Indonesia to Chinese parents, later immigrating to the United States. A distinct and influential voice in Asian American poetry, he is most known for his collection The City in Which I Love You. Influenced by classical Chinese poetry, Lee's work embody characteristics of strength, silence, and simplicity, often in conjunction with existentialism, as exhibited in his poem "Big Clock", a rumination on time, aging, and grief. On the writing of this poem, Lee: “This poem is an attempt, I suppose, to understand time—the nature of time—and it seems to me that each of these stanzas is a figure of time on the one hand, and on the other hand a figure for eternity. I’m not sure if I’ve successfully communicated that, and I don’t mean in terms of subject matter or narrative, but in terms of what the language might inspire in the reader: the images, the ideas, but even more than the images and ideas (which are all in the head) something at a cellular level of understanding, something at a logic beyond our diurnal logic."

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Elegy for my Sadness By Chen Chen (Grades 7-9)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Elegy for my Sadness By Chen Chen

A queer Chinese American poet, Chen Chen's work has appeared in Poetry, The New York Times Magazine, and The Best American Poetry. His first collection, When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities, was selected by Jericho Brown for the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize and longlisted for the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry. From the same book, Elegy for My Sadness is an intimate and lyrical examination of love, romancing, and poetic whimsy.

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While I was Away By Waka T. Brown (Grades 4-6)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about While I was Away By Waka T. Brown

This inspring memoir, While I was Away talks about the unfamiliar feeling author Waka T. Brown feels when she's forced to go to Japan. Known as the "smart Japanese girl" in rural Kansas, she is soon labelled as the "dumb foreigner" in Japan as she struggles with reading and writing in kanji, doesn’t quite mesh with her complicated, distant, and strict Obaasama (grandma), and gets made fun of by the students in her Japanese public-school classes. Waka T. Brown is a Stanford graduate with a BA in International Relations and a Master's in Secondary Education.

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Yes We Will: Asian Americans Who Shaped This Country By Kelly Yang (Grades 1-3)

May 25, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about Yes We Will By Kelly Yang

Written by Front Desk author, Kelly Yang, Yes We Will: Asian Americans Who Shaped This Country is a valuable survey of influential Asian Americans who have had profound impact on contemporary society. From Yo-Yo Ma to Jeremy Lin to Sandra Oh to Kamala Harris, kids (and grownups!) will read about and be inspired by the stories of Asian Americans and their stories of success and overcoming obstacles to get to where they were.

Kelly Yang, as mentioned, is the award winning author of the Front Desk series. Yes We Will has garnered recognition from the Texas Topaz Reading List, the Bank Street College Best Children's Books of the Year, and is a NCSS-CBC Notable Social Studies Trade Book

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Homewrecker By Ocean Vuong (Grades 10+)

May 11, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Homewrecker By Ocean Vuong

Ocean Vuong is an award-winning Vietnamese-American poet, novelist, and essayist from Northhampton, Massacheusetts. Homewrecker is the fourteenth poem in Vuong's 2016 book Night Sky with Exit Wounds, which has won numerous accolades including the T.S. Eliot Prize, the Whiting Award, the Thom Gunn Award, and the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. Homewrecker explores themes of the body and love through Vuong's recounting of a forbidden affair between two lovers that could have destructive consequences for both parties.

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The Magic Fish By Trung Le Nguyen (Grades 7-9)

May 11, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to learn more about The Magic Fish By Trung Le Nguyen

Trung Le Capecchi-Nguyen (Trung Le Nguyen, professionally) is an award-winning Vietnamese-American cartoonist, artist, and writer from Minnesota. He is also known as Trungles, has been a cartoonist for over 10 years, working on DC and Marvel comics, Adventure Time, The Sea is Ours, his own work and much more."The Magic Fish", which was published in 2020, is Trung Le Nguye's semi-biographical debut graphic novel. It follow the life of Tiến Phong as he navigates his life as a second generation American Vietnamese teenager. He is trying to help his mother learn english through fairy tales, all the while, he is struggling to tell her about his sexuality.

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I Ask My Mother to Sing By Li-Young Lee (Grade 4-6)

May 11, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read I Ask My Mother to Sing By Li-Young Lee

Li-Young Lee was born in Indonesia to Chinese parents, but had to flee due to rising anti-chinese sentiments. They fled to Hong Kong, Macau, and Japan, finally arriving in the United States in 1964. Although Lee’s parents were from China, he himself has never been to China. So in the poem I ask my mother to sing, Lee talks about how his mother and grandmother sing about all the wonders in China. Through this song, Lee is able to envision his parents’ birthplace with much clarity, despite having never been there before. Despite being a poem with a light and beautiful tone, it depicts the pain of exile from one’s homeland.

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Buzz By Janet S. Wong (Grades 1-3)

May 11, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about Buzz By Janet S. Wong

A child experiences his environment as he interacts with the sighs and sounds of the morning. "Buzz" is a coming-of-age children's picture book that explores family routines reoccuring sounds. Janet S. Wong is a Chinese-Korean American poet and author of children's literature. She is the winnder of the 2021 NCTE Award for Excellence in poetry, one of th most prestigious award for a children's poet. She grew up in Los Angeles, California in Koreatown, however did not speak neither Chinese nor Korean. She draws inspiration from her own identity and cultural background, and features these experiences in her published writings.

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Obit By Victoria Chang (Grades 10+)

May 04, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Obit By Victoria Chang

Victoria Chang was born in Detroit, Michigan. Her publications include books include The Trees Witness Everything (Copper Canyon, 2022); OBIT (Copper Canyon, 2020); Circle (2005), and Barbie Chang (2017). In 2015, she loses her mother to pulmonary fibrosis, a loss that took away her language and forever altered her syntactical organization. Published in 2020, Obit explores, in the format of newspaper obituaries, what she lost, beyond the obvious, beyond the material. It depicts the boundaries between what is public and private, and makes visible the path of grief as it struggles to personify itself in language. It makes clear that grammatical constraint itself was an invention, and how to deny that is to deny that we made it up as we went.

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Things We Carry on the Sea By Wang Ping (Grades 7-9)

May 04, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Things We Carry on the Sea By Wang Ping

“Things We Carry on the Sea” by Wang Ping tells of the different stories, skills, and experiences carried by immigrants from Eastern Asia, often to a place that disregards their labor and hard work.These places treat the refugees who now provide for their nations without welcome, forcing them to drift without a place to call home. Ping, a Chinese-American English professor, is an expert both in writing and multimedia projects, creating exhibits like “Behind the Gate: After the Flood of the Three Gorges” and "We Are Water: Kinship of Rivers,” alongside editing the anthology New Generation: Poetry from China Today. She has also founded the Kinship of Two Rivers project at Macalester College.

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The Name Jar By Yangsook Choi (Gredea 4-6)

May 04, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about the name jar by yangsook choi

Being the new kid in school is hard, but what about when nobody can properly pronounce your name? The Name Jar is a picture book that explores the indentities, specifically names, of young immigrants. Unhei is nervous that about the students not liking her, so she doesn't introduce herself, instead telling the class that she doesn't have a name. This picture book talks about the voices of immigrants whose traditional names have been supressed, and possibly overpowered by more Western sounding names.

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Wishes By Mượn Thị Văn (Grades 1-3)

May 04, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to learn more about Wishes By Mượn Thị Văn

This book takes you on a journey from one side of the world to the other. "Wishes" tells an influential and powerful story in a gentle way that can capture people's hearts. It talks about a Vietnamese family in search of a new home and how much it makes an impact on one of the youngest members of the family. Through the perspective of the young girl, this picture book shows the obstacles of travelling to a new and unknown place in a crowded boat. So many awards have been given to this novel including the "#1 Best Picture Book of the 2021" by BookPage and also the "Margaret Wise Brown Prize". The master behind this book is Mượn Thị Văn. She is a Vietnamese author who doesn't just loves to write books, but loves to read them as well.

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Find X By Grace Q Song (Grades 10+)

April 27, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

Click Here to read Find X by Grace Q Song

Grace Q Song is an Chinese American poet specialising in short-forms and poetry. Achieving success and recognition on the teen writing scene, her words have been feature in collections such as Best Microfiction, Best Small Fiction, and more. "Find X", a microfiction work selected into the 2020 Best of Net anthology. From Laura Billow, an editorial intern at Passages North, where the piece was first published: "Grace Q. Song's "Find X" made me question the way I view the world and all its wonders. Her story is like an adult version of a child's imagination running wild inside the unknown."

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The Shampoo By Elizabeth Bishop (Grades 7-9)

April 27, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

Click here to read The Shampoo by Elizabeth Bishop

Elizabeth Bishop was an artist in the 1900's. She is known to be able to catch significant scenes in a dramatically effective way. Bishop is a queer artist, some called her the lesbian poet. She attended Walnut School for the Arts which is an elite program in order to get her degree of arts. Her piece Shampoo is a lot poem about her and her partner taking a bath and taking care of each other. The poem is short but captures a lot of emotions in that one picture. The piece is a metaphor for time and includes the imagery of nature. She implores this through the washing of her partners hair. The line “They have arranged to meet the rings around the moon, although within our memories they have not changed,” talks about how their memories will last despite their time together slowly fading.

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Her Blue Body Full of Light By Warsan Shire (Grades 4-6)

April 27, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

Click here to read Her Blue Body Full of Light by Warsan Shire

Warsan Shire is a Somali British writer and poet born in Nairobi and raised in London. She was awarded the inaugural Brunel International African Poetry Prize and served as the first Young Poet Laureate of London. She is the youngest member of the Royal Society of Literature and is included in the Penguin Modern Poets series. Her Blue Body Full of Light is found in Warsan's collection of work Her Blue Body that explores the complexities in liife including heritage, cultural sensitivity, trauma and womanhood. This poem, through imagery, explores the impact of cancer. Mirroring the first poem in the collection, Her Blue Body Full of Light ends off the collection, a final testamony to friendship and loss.

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Jazz Jiv Jam By Kwame Alexander (Grades 1-3)

April 27, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read jazz jiv jam by Kwame Alexander

"Poetry is a lot like music. Poetry has rhythm and it can rhyme like a song. Jazz Jive Jam is a fun poem about the power of music. It's by poet Kwame Alexander, who dedicated the poem to another famous poet, Langston Hughes.

Kwame Alexander is the award-winning author of many books for kids, including the basketball verse novel, The Crossover. Langston Hughes was a poet famed for writing poems influenced by jazz music. He was part of the ""Harlem Renaissance"" in the 1920s when many African-American artists, writers, and musicians produced remarkable works of art."

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