search for books and compare prices
Bino A. Realuyo has written 3 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 3 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9780874808612 Cover for 9781889876078 Cover for 9780345428882
cover image for 9780874808612
Product Description: The Agha Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry was inaugurated in 2003 to honor the late poet, a nationally recognized writer and a former professor at the University of Utah, and is sponsored by the University of Utah Press and the University of Utah Department of English...read more

Paperback:

9780874808612 | Univ of Utah Pr, June 30, 2006, cover price $12.95 | About this edition: The Agha Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry was inaugurated in 2003 to honor the late poet, a nationally recognized writer and a former professor at the University of Utah, and is sponsored by the University of Utah Press and the University of Utah Department of English.

The history of Asian-Americans in the United States has traditionally been focused on the West Coast and Hawaii; yet, the community on the East Coast, particularly New York City, has been steadily growing since the first three Chinese students came to the city in 1847. A collection of fiction, poetry, essays, and art, The NuyorAsian Anthology maps Asian American life in New York City, beginning with works by poet Jose Garcia Villa in the 1930s and the birth of the Asian-American literary and political movement in the 1970s. The collection also explores the more contemporary voices of Pico Iyer, Bharati Mukherjee, Jessica Hagedorn, Kimiko Hahn, Vijay Seshadri, Wang Ping, and many others. Ranging in age from 16 to 87, more than sixty writers and artists look at love and loss, work and history, identity and sexuality, loneliness and dislocation, giving a closer look at the most diverse ethnic community in the United States. Their language is raw and experimental, yet immediately classic. The NuyorAsian Anthology examines the character of New York City itself, its intense dynamic, and its residents' attempts to decipher its ever elusive meanings. New York has been the home and inspiration of many of the most important artists of our time-including some of our most extraordinary Asian-American voices. Like the city about which they are written, these are stories, poems, and essays that stare back: unencumbered, longing, distanced, and moving. (view table of contents)
By Kendal Henry (editor), Bino A. Realuyo (editor) and Rahna Reiko Rizzuto (editor)

Hardcover:

9781889876085 | Temple Univ Pr, November 1, 2000, cover price $60.95

Paperback:

9781889876078 | Temple Univ Pr, June 1, 1999, cover price $24.95 | About this edition: The history of Asian-Americans in the United States has traditionally been focused on the West Coast and Hawaii; yet, the community on the East Coast, particularly New York City, has been steadily growing since the first three Chinese students came to the city in 1847.

cover image for 9780345428882
A poor, eleven-year-old boy named Gringo contends with his older brother's transvestism, his father's unemployment, his mother's anger, and his godmother's shame as he dreams of a better world on the streets of Manila in the 1970s. Reprint.

Paperback:

9780345428882 | Reprint edition (Ballantine Books, March 2, 1999), cover price $19.00 | About this edition: A poor, eleven-year-old boy named Gringo contends with his older brother's transvestism, his father's unemployment, his mother's anger, and his godmother's shame as he dreams of a better world on the streets of Manila in the 1970s

displaying 1 to 3 | at end