<p>Marilyn Chin is a poet acclaimed by Adrienne Rich for her &quot;powerful uncompromised and unerring&quot; poems. Dancing brilliantly between Eastern and Western forms fusing ancient Chinese history and contemporary American popular culture she is one of the most celebrated Asian-American poets writing today.</p><p>Chin&#39;s fourth volume of poems <em>Hard Love Province</em> is composed of erotic elegies in which the speaker grieves for the loss of her beloved. In &quot;Void&quot; she writes with the imagistic distilled quietude of a solitary mourner: &quot;It&#39;s not that you are rare / Nor are you extraordinary // O lone wren sobbing on the bodhi tree / You are simple and sincere.&quot; In &quot;Formosan Elegy&quot; by contrast she is that mourner beyond simplicity or quietude crying out for a lover: &quot;I sing for you but my tears have dried in my gullet / Walk the old dog give the budgies a cool bath / Cut a tender melon let it bleed into memory.&quot;</p><p>Here too are poems inspired by Chin&#39;s poetic forbearers and mentors--Dickinson Plath Ai Gwendolyn Brooks Tu Fu Adrienne Rich and others--honoring their work and descrying the global injustice they addressed. &quot;Whose life is it anyway?&quot; she asks in a poem for Rich &quot;She born of chrysalis and shit / Or she born of woman and pain?&quot;</p><p>Emotionally nuanced and electric with high-flying verbal experimentation image after image line by line Chin&#39;s spectacular reinventions her quatrains sonnets allegories and elegies are unforgettable.</p>