
Thousand Star Hotel
Poetry by Bao Phi
July 5, 2017 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠112 Pages ⢠978-1-56689-470-8
Poems from a father, a refugee, an activist resisting the invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.
Thousand Star Hotel confronts the silence around racism, police brutality, and the invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.
This project made possible with special funding from the Fringe Foundation.
About the Author
Bao Phi is a multiple-time Minnesota Grand Slam poetry champ and National Poetry Slam finalist who has been on HBOās Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry and whose work was included in the Best American Poetry anthology of 2006. He is the author of SĆ“ng I Sing and is currently the program director of the Loft Literary Center.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please email us atĀ [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Winner of the 2017 Poetry Center Book Award
āBao PhiāsĀ Thousand Star HotelĀ is a vividly inward look at an Asian American experience that never flinches from the hard realizations of humanity. Bao ties generations together at his personal crossroad of fatherhood and lets the reader see, feel, and hear the electricity of his renowned stage performance blossoming on the page. Baoās poems haunt our collective American psyche until a ānew region of the tongue is discoveredā that lets us know what ātastes like the middle of the crosshairs of a drone bomber / tastes like science concocting survival.āāĀ āTyehimba Jess, author ofĀ Olio
ā[Phiās] irreverent profundity shines in prose poems and fixed forms alike.āĀ āNew York Times Book Review
ā[Phiās] fluid, open writing is frequently shot through with moments of lyricism. . . . Accessible, accomplished, and troubling, this should intrigue many Āreaders.āĀ āLibrary Journal
āThe strength of this book comes from the clear and forceful voice. The words leap off the pages, half alive already. . . .Ā Thousand Star HotelĀ is a fierce, burning indictment of racism and xenophobia.āĀ āChicago Review of Books
āThousand Star HotelĀ is a cutting collection of poems about growing up a refugee, becoming a father, feeling surrounded by police brutality and the invisibility of poor Asian-Americans.āĀ āNPRās Code Switch
āFilled with snapshots of the American immigrant experience, intense love for family, and deep empathy for community, this latest poetry collection by National Poetry Slam finalist Bao Phi,Ā Thousand Star Hotel, challenges racism, police brutality, and the silencing invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.āĀ āBustle
āWritten with immense empathy and honesty, Thousand Star Hotel is a moving, heartbreakingly beautiful portrait of the lives of Vietnamese refugees in the U.S.ā āBuzzFeed
āMuch more than a set of poems, [Thousand Star Hotel] is its own history: a chronicle of Phiās family, present, past and future. Spinning this history together from fragments of memory and reflection, the collection provides a critical thread in the fabric of Asian American literature, history, and activismāpast and present.āĀ āKartika Review
āThereās sparkling range within these poems, and the reach is fluid. . . . [Phi] takes disparate and precise moments of family, work, fatherhood, and shows their wider echo.āĀ āThe Millions
āThousand Star HotelĀ is equal parts heartbreaking and bitingly funny. . . . This volume is a must-read for readers seeking a greater understanding of race, but also for any reader who has children or parents, experienced heartbreak, or just loves the sound of finely wrought lines.āĀ āStar Tribune
āThousand Star HotelĀ skillfully weaves a range of topicsāpolice brutality, Asian American representation, masculinity, fatherhood, and his immigrant experience growing up in Minnesota, to name just a few.āĀ āAngry Asian Man
āWhile writing about his experience with racism on the streets of the Phillips neighborhood of Minneapolis, and his encounters with a cultural mainstream in which he barely sees his people represented, Phi paints a sensitive portrait of his life as both an outsider to, and a participant in, mainstream American culture.āĀ āThe Rumpus
āA beautiful collection of passionate poems that explores the deep-seated trauma and discrimination in an Asian-American life.āĀ āSonder
āThese poems are significant and weighty, but in an instant they go from somber to full of swagger, and I canāt emphasize enough how thrilling they felt to read.ā āThe Margins
ā[Phi] has few peers that can match him in his assessment of contemporary culture and social justice.ā āCultural Weekly
ā[Thousand Star Hotel]Ā is bold in its language for experiences that oscillate between existence and erasure, and it is moving in its mission to challenge the boundaries of solidarity and to refuse neat conceptions of past, present and future.āĀ āWritersā Block Blog
āThe many fans of Bao Phi will be thrilled by this book. New readers will be seduced by his trademark blend of passion, politics, and poetry. His poems alternate between the profane and the provocative as they deal with war and history, love and heartbreak, the inner city and the inner self. A powerful read, a gutsy writer.ā āViet Thanh Nguyen
āThousand Star Hotel feels bracing and true. Phiās voice is as electric in print as on the stage, coupling precise imagery with a surprising frankness.ā āThe Rumpus
āAt once tender and taboo-busting, pithy and sprawling, effulgent and expository, Thousand Star Hotel is a compendium of āwarring idealsā spoken through the voices and seen through the eyes of a refugee child turned poet adult, his embattled parents, neighborhood pals and bullies, past flames and would-be lovers, an exotifying cultureānot to mention Phiās young daughter, for whom the collection is a record with which she might one day construct her own consciousness.ā āKenyon Review
āBao PhiāsĀ Thousand Star HotelĀ echoes the fire in his earlier work, which skewers racism and class with the precision of a skilled chef. Yet, when Phi splits open the vulnerable and humbling moments of love, childhood, and fatherhood, he creates a body of satisfying, poignant poems that create moments of quiet introspection like diners hushed by the first bites of an anticipated meal. Bao Phi carries an honest, powerful voice, and he is not afraid to look into the boiling pots of his past or the roiling violence in America and abroad.āĀ āTara Betts, author ofĀ Break the Habit
āBao Phi. . . cinches the balance between lively rhetoric for the stage and subtle delights on the page.ā āThe Corresponder
āIf you want a truly raw and American experience, one that just might help explain the day-to-day culmination of white supremacy, genocide, and absurd politics, then Bao Phi has a room with a tough and vital view.ā āNewPages
ā[Thousand Star Hotel] is both a loving history for the poetās daughter and a powerful resistance to cultural erasure.ā āMonitor St. Paul
āThough often painful in its witness to violence, these poems offer quiet celebration of survival and resilience, often from an older adult speaker looking back at his younger self.ā āBrazos Bookstore
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Description
Poetry by Bao Phi
July 5, 2017 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠112 Pages ⢠978-1-56689-470-8
Poems from a father, a refugee, an activist resisting the invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.
Thousand Star Hotel confronts the silence around racism, police brutality, and the invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.
This project made possible with special funding from the Fringe Foundation.
About the Author
Bao Phi is a multiple-time Minnesota Grand Slam poetry champ and National Poetry Slam finalist who has been on HBOās Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry and whose work was included in the Best American Poetry anthology of 2006. He is the author of SĆ“ng I Sing and is currently the program director of the Loft Literary Center.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please email us atĀ [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Winner of the 2017 Poetry Center Book Award
āBao PhiāsĀ Thousand Star HotelĀ is a vividly inward look at an Asian American experience that never flinches from the hard realizations of humanity. Bao ties generations together at his personal crossroad of fatherhood and lets the reader see, feel, and hear the electricity of his renowned stage performance blossoming on the page. Baoās poems haunt our collective American psyche until a ānew region of the tongue is discoveredā that lets us know what ātastes like the middle of the crosshairs of a drone bomber / tastes like science concocting survival.āāĀ āTyehimba Jess, author ofĀ Olio
ā[Phiās] irreverent profundity shines in prose poems and fixed forms alike.āĀ āNew York Times Book Review
ā[Phiās] fluid, open writing is frequently shot through with moments of lyricism. . . . Accessible, accomplished, and troubling, this should intrigue many Āreaders.āĀ āLibrary Journal
āThe strength of this book comes from the clear and forceful voice. The words leap off the pages, half alive already. . . .Ā Thousand Star HotelĀ is a fierce, burning indictment of racism and xenophobia.āĀ āChicago Review of Books
āThousand Star HotelĀ is a cutting collection of poems about growing up a refugee, becoming a father, feeling surrounded by police brutality and the invisibility of poor Asian-Americans.āĀ āNPRās Code Switch
āFilled with snapshots of the American immigrant experience, intense love for family, and deep empathy for community, this latest poetry collection by National Poetry Slam finalist Bao Phi,Ā Thousand Star Hotel, challenges racism, police brutality, and the silencing invisibility of the Asian American urban poor.āĀ āBustle
āWritten with immense empathy and honesty, Thousand Star Hotel is a moving, heartbreakingly beautiful portrait of the lives of Vietnamese refugees in the U.S.ā āBuzzFeed
āMuch more than a set of poems, [Thousand Star Hotel] is its own history: a chronicle of Phiās family, present, past and future. Spinning this history together from fragments of memory and reflection, the collection provides a critical thread in the fabric of Asian American literature, history, and activismāpast and present.āĀ āKartika Review
āThereās sparkling range within these poems, and the reach is fluid. . . . [Phi] takes disparate and precise moments of family, work, fatherhood, and shows their wider echo.āĀ āThe Millions
āThousand Star HotelĀ is equal parts heartbreaking and bitingly funny. . . . This volume is a must-read for readers seeking a greater understanding of race, but also for any reader who has children or parents, experienced heartbreak, or just loves the sound of finely wrought lines.āĀ āStar Tribune
āThousand Star HotelĀ skillfully weaves a range of topicsāpolice brutality, Asian American representation, masculinity, fatherhood, and his immigrant experience growing up in Minnesota, to name just a few.āĀ āAngry Asian Man
āWhile writing about his experience with racism on the streets of the Phillips neighborhood of Minneapolis, and his encounters with a cultural mainstream in which he barely sees his people represented, Phi paints a sensitive portrait of his life as both an outsider to, and a participant in, mainstream American culture.āĀ āThe Rumpus
āA beautiful collection of passionate poems that explores the deep-seated trauma and discrimination in an Asian-American life.āĀ āSonder
āThese poems are significant and weighty, but in an instant they go from somber to full of swagger, and I canāt emphasize enough how thrilling they felt to read.ā āThe Margins
ā[Phi] has few peers that can match him in his assessment of contemporary culture and social justice.ā āCultural Weekly
ā[Thousand Star Hotel]Ā is bold in its language for experiences that oscillate between existence and erasure, and it is moving in its mission to challenge the boundaries of solidarity and to refuse neat conceptions of past, present and future.āĀ āWritersā Block Blog
āThe many fans of Bao Phi will be thrilled by this book. New readers will be seduced by his trademark blend of passion, politics, and poetry. His poems alternate between the profane and the provocative as they deal with war and history, love and heartbreak, the inner city and the inner self. A powerful read, a gutsy writer.ā āViet Thanh Nguyen
āThousand Star Hotel feels bracing and true. Phiās voice is as electric in print as on the stage, coupling precise imagery with a surprising frankness.ā āThe Rumpus
āAt once tender and taboo-busting, pithy and sprawling, effulgent and expository, Thousand Star Hotel is a compendium of āwarring idealsā spoken through the voices and seen through the eyes of a refugee child turned poet adult, his embattled parents, neighborhood pals and bullies, past flames and would-be lovers, an exotifying cultureānot to mention Phiās young daughter, for whom the collection is a record with which she might one day construct her own consciousness.ā āKenyon Review
āBao PhiāsĀ Thousand Star HotelĀ echoes the fire in his earlier work, which skewers racism and class with the precision of a skilled chef. Yet, when Phi splits open the vulnerable and humbling moments of love, childhood, and fatherhood, he creates a body of satisfying, poignant poems that create moments of quiet introspection like diners hushed by the first bites of an anticipated meal. Bao Phi carries an honest, powerful voice, and he is not afraid to look into the boiling pots of his past or the roiling violence in America and abroad.āĀ āTara Betts, author ofĀ Break the Habit
āBao Phi. . . cinches the balance between lively rhetoric for the stage and subtle delights on the page.ā āThe Corresponder
āIf you want a truly raw and American experience, one that just might help explain the day-to-day culmination of white supremacy, genocide, and absurd politics, then Bao Phi has a room with a tough and vital view.ā āNewPages
ā[Thousand Star Hotel] is both a loving history for the poetās daughter and a powerful resistance to cultural erasure.ā āMonitor St. Paul
āThough often painful in its witness to violence, these poems offer quiet celebration of survival and resilience, often from an older adult speaker looking back at his younger self.ā āBrazos Bookstore

