University of Utah Press, 2012 Paper: 978-1-60781-205-0 | eISBN: 978-1-60781-206-7 Library of Congress Classification PS3625.O96546N54 2012 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.6
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Winner of the Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Prize
Set against the sprawling backdrop of Los Angeles, Night Radio excavates the kidnapping and sexual assault of a young girl and the resulting layers of trauma exacted upon her and her family. Working within the paradox of the insufficiency of language and the necessity of expression, these poems elevate overwhelming experiences into near-mythic narrative. Night Radio’s attempt through art to “make sense” of a seemingly senseless world raises troubling and timeless questions about the value, necessity, and futility of the aesthetic act. At the heart of the book is a journey toward reconciliation—wherein one discovers an abiding though hard-won faith within a complex, overwhelming, and, at times, frightening universe.
Finalist for the Kate Tufts Discovery Award.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Kim Young teaches creative writing and composition at Moorpark College and edits Chaparral, an online journal featuring poetry from Southern California. Her poems have appeared in The Los Angeles Review, MiPOesias, Pebble Lake Review, and other journals. She holds an MA from California State University Northridge and an MFA from Bennington College, where she received a Jane Kenyon Scholarship in poetry. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter.
REVIEWS
“The sounds of Night Radio move between hard-won revelation and pulsing music; they spread across the dry outlands of LA, a world of ‘silt and turkey vultures’ where men in trucks hunt for girls, and where girls kiss their ‘practice-hopes,’ then run like ambulances toward a ‘slick gentleman lighting matches under a streetlight.’ Watchful, vulnerable, quick, and shrewd, the poems shove through a broken world: El Niño’s floods drag raccoons and possums; a boyfriend becomes a place ‘my legs get to wrap’; a cop, a father, cannot protect his daughter from abduction. All this, joined in radiant waves to the ‘little signal towers’ of the body. A brave and accomplished first book.”—David Gewanter, Georgetown University
"The poems are so moving, I feel as if I am suffering as much as any of the characters. This really is an excellent book of poetry. Her story is heartbreaking."
—Apalachee Review
"Kim Young's Night Radio works much as its subject matter does: worming its way into your ear like an urban legend, it lodges somewhere behind your eyes and works itself out in pieces, at night, almost against your will. [Her] debut collection feels real, dark, and deep. In the face of horrible and irrational deeds, we are still open to communication, and the book reminds us of that in startling and lyric ways."
—Pebble Lake Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
1. What We Count On
Too Much Text
Abduction
Sleight of Hand
Was It Beautiful?
The Fabric of Afternoon
Matching Terry Sweatsuits
To Obscure a Body of Light
My Aunt Believes in Horses
What We Count On
My Burgher Dollhouse
2. The Parting
The Facts
Snapshot, 1993
The Setting
How to Unmake a Father
The Parting
Make-Believe with the LAPD
Sedna Becomes Inuit Goddess of the Sea: A Prequel
Hum
The Myths
Snapshot, 1982
Anti-Elegy
My Sister
Winter
Divided Highway
3. Latchkey
Blacktop Girls
Blue Balls, Revised
At Rehab
The Powerful
What We Learn at Valley High
California Pith
The Night Stalker
In Humboldt County
How Gently the Words Have Been Placed into My Mouth
Nerve
Forgiveness
Addiction
Elephant Girl
Snapshot, 1978
Latchkey
Outer Space
Come Bright Galaxy
Acknowledgments
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
University of Utah Press, 2012 Paper: 978-1-60781-205-0 eISBN: 978-1-60781-206-7
Winner of the Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Prize
Set against the sprawling backdrop of Los Angeles, Night Radio excavates the kidnapping and sexual assault of a young girl and the resulting layers of trauma exacted upon her and her family. Working within the paradox of the insufficiency of language and the necessity of expression, these poems elevate overwhelming experiences into near-mythic narrative. Night Radio’s attempt through art to “make sense” of a seemingly senseless world raises troubling and timeless questions about the value, necessity, and futility of the aesthetic act. At the heart of the book is a journey toward reconciliation—wherein one discovers an abiding though hard-won faith within a complex, overwhelming, and, at times, frightening universe.
Finalist for the Kate Tufts Discovery Award.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Kim Young teaches creative writing and composition at Moorpark College and edits Chaparral, an online journal featuring poetry from Southern California. Her poems have appeared in The Los Angeles Review, MiPOesias, Pebble Lake Review, and other journals. She holds an MA from California State University Northridge and an MFA from Bennington College, where she received a Jane Kenyon Scholarship in poetry. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter.
REVIEWS
“The sounds of Night Radio move between hard-won revelation and pulsing music; they spread across the dry outlands of LA, a world of ‘silt and turkey vultures’ where men in trucks hunt for girls, and where girls kiss their ‘practice-hopes,’ then run like ambulances toward a ‘slick gentleman lighting matches under a streetlight.’ Watchful, vulnerable, quick, and shrewd, the poems shove through a broken world: El Niño’s floods drag raccoons and possums; a boyfriend becomes a place ‘my legs get to wrap’; a cop, a father, cannot protect his daughter from abduction. All this, joined in radiant waves to the ‘little signal towers’ of the body. A brave and accomplished first book.”—David Gewanter, Georgetown University
"The poems are so moving, I feel as if I am suffering as much as any of the characters. This really is an excellent book of poetry. Her story is heartbreaking."
—Apalachee Review
"Kim Young's Night Radio works much as its subject matter does: worming its way into your ear like an urban legend, it lodges somewhere behind your eyes and works itself out in pieces, at night, almost against your will. [Her] debut collection feels real, dark, and deep. In the face of horrible and irrational deeds, we are still open to communication, and the book reminds us of that in startling and lyric ways."
—Pebble Lake Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
1. What We Count On
Too Much Text
Abduction
Sleight of Hand
Was It Beautiful?
The Fabric of Afternoon
Matching Terry Sweatsuits
To Obscure a Body of Light
My Aunt Believes in Horses
What We Count On
My Burgher Dollhouse
2. The Parting
The Facts
Snapshot, 1993
The Setting
How to Unmake a Father
The Parting
Make-Believe with the LAPD
Sedna Becomes Inuit Goddess of the Sea: A Prequel
Hum
The Myths
Snapshot, 1982
Anti-Elegy
My Sister
Winter
Divided Highway
3. Latchkey
Blacktop Girls
Blue Balls, Revised
At Rehab
The Powerful
What We Learn at Valley High
California Pith
The Night Stalker
In Humboldt County
How Gently the Words Have Been Placed into My Mouth
Nerve
Forgiveness
Addiction
Elephant Girl
Snapshot, 1978
Latchkey
Outer Space
Come Bright Galaxy
Acknowledgments
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE