Tuesday, November 10, 2015

CONCHITINA CRUZ




Conchitina "Chingbee" R. Cruz is a Filipina poet who teaches creative writing and comparative literature at the University of the Philippines at Diliman.
Formerly an INTARMED student, Cruz shifted to the University of the Philippines' Creative writing program, from which she graduated magna cum laude and College of Arts and Letters, Valedcitorian in 1998.
While on a Fulbright grant, she studied and taught at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she received her MFA in Writing. She is currently taking her PhD in SUNY Albany.
Her works include Disappear, a chapbook published in 2005 by High Chair, Dark Hours, published in 2005 by The University of the Philippines Press, elsewhere held and lingered, published in 2008 by High Chair, and A catalogue of clothes for sale from the closet of Christine Abella: perpetual student, ukay fan, and compulsive traveler, published in 2012 by the Youth & Beauty Brigade. She is also the youngest poet in the anthology A Habit of Shores, the third part in Germino H. Abad's three-volume collection of one hundred years of Philippine poetry and verse.
Some of her works have also appeared in Mid-American Review, Indiana Review, Philippine Studies and the online journal High Chair. In September 2006, Dark Hours was reviewed by Andy Brown, the creative writing program director at the University of Bxeter.
Cruz has won two Palanca Awards to date, one in 1996 for "Second Skin" and another in 2001 for "The Shortest Distance". Her book Dark Hours won the 2006 National Book Award for Poetry.
In June 2014, she established with boyfriend writer Adam David a hole-in-the-wall bookstore and pub in Quezon City called Uno Morato dedicated to independently-published or small-press books where they hold a monthly small press mini-expo.

One of her works is Dark Hours. At this historical moment when the issue of how to respond to suffering is so fraught as to leave us speechless, the poems of Conchitina Cruz have found a way to speak. Here in this starkly beautiful volume, she has discovered a language sufficient to the terrors and the joys of the contemporary. The highest praise that can be given to any work of literature—and Dark Hours is most surely literature—is that it is contemporary. This is a very remarkable book.

SOURCE:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conchitina_Cruz

3 comments: