October 7, 2021-Arts and more-International Examiner

2021-10-27 08:29:03 By : Mr. David Xu

"Contemporary Joomchi: New Works" is an exhibition held by Jiyoung Chung at ArtXchange Gallery in Seattle from October 7th to November 20th, 2021. In this exhibition, the artist explored Korea's ancient handmade felted hanji (mulberry paper) craft tradition. She revives the tradition of perforating, dyeing and stacking cardboard, and brings it into the new realm of modernist abstraction. The opening hours are from 5 pm to 8 pm on October 7th. The reception will be held on November 4th from 5pm to 8pm. 512 1 st Ave. S. Pioneer Square in Seattle. Open from Tuesday to Saturday from 11 am to 5:30 pm. 206-839-0377 or try artxchange.org. 

Dante Marioni/Jun Kaneko at Traver Gallery in Seattle" highlights the work of two major artists in the field of glass and ceramics. October 7-30, 2021. For more information, please visit travergallery.com.

Judy Koo's work is included in a large group exhibition called "2 Gather", which will be exhibited in Studio e on October 16, 2021. For more information, please visit studioegallery.net.

"American Modernist Kenjiro Nomura: The Journey of an Artist" will be exhibited at the Cascadia Art Museum from October 21 to February 20, 2022. This is the first exhibition of this Northwestern artist in more than 60 years. Nomura painted the Seattle neighborhoods before the war, especially the downtown and Chinatown/ID, and co-owned Noto Sign Company with another famous artist Masaki Tokada. After his detention and the end of World War II, Nomura returned in a modern abstract style. He also gained a reputation for being the first artist to hold a solo exhibition at the Seattle Art Museum. This show will show the trajectory of his different professions. It is accompanied by a book by the historian Barbara Johns. 190 South Sunset Boulevard, Edmonds, Washington. 425-336-4809 or cascadiaartmuseum.org.

AMcE Creative Art showcases the "Universal Garden", a new exhibition of works by Denver artist Christine Nguyen. The exhibition will last until October 23, 2021. Nguyen is currently working with Sound Transit on a public art project for Federal Way. She has exhibited extensively all over the world and coast to coast. The gallery is located at 612 – 19 th Ave. E. in Seattle. Business hours are from 11 am to 6 pm from Thursday to Saturday, and reservations are required on Wednesday. For information, please email [email protected].

"Queer Visibility" is part of the Henry Museum's "View" series. This was curated by Nina Bozicnik and Kira Sue. These include works by Berlin artist Dean Sameshima and Seattle artist Anthony White. Sameshima made connection diagrams based on old gay leather magazine photos, and White created dancing figures, equating male nudes with ubiquitous consumer goods. October 2021 to January 2022. There is also "Diana N-Hadid: Desire Archives", showing works that explore the interaction between the female body and European art and the history of Syrian Muslim immigration. October 2, 2021 to February 6, 2022. The Seattle campus of the University of Washington at 15 th Ave. NE and NE 41 st. 206-543-2280 or visit henryart.org.

Michelle Kumata's "Northwest Nikkei" program will be on display at the Seattle Japanese Garden Tateuchi Community Room from August 17 to October 31, 2021. Admission fees apply, tickets must be purchased 24 hours in advance, and reservations must be made on Fridays. - Sun. access. The business hours are changing every month. Closed on Monday. It is open normally, but please call 206-684-4725 in advance to confirm. For more information, please visit https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/location-and-hours. To view some works of Japanese Garden online, please visit https://www.seattlejapanesegarden.org/events-calendar/2021/10/northwestnikkei. The Library of Congress also houses several works on paper by the artist. If you are in Washington, DC and over 16 years old, you can view the work in person in the library’s print and photograph reading room.

"Swallowing Silence: Power and Censorship in Art" is an event at the Bellwether Festival in Bellwether (until September 9, 2021-visit bellwether.org for details.) This is a forum hosted by Ploi Pirapokin, Among them, local artists Erin Shigaki and Anida Yoeu Ali shared their experiences in censorship, racism and sexism, and provided suggestions and solutions. To access this content online, please visit https://bellwetherart.org/swallowing-silence-panel.

Modern Glaze Ceramic Studio and Gallery launched "Intimate History", a group exhibition of seven ceramic artists who investigated their intimate touch and deep-rooted "consciousness." Curated by Doug Jeck and Laura Brodax. Includes works by Re/On Nguyen, Adrian Gomez, Robin Green, S. Lantz, Gustavo Martinez, Sonya Peterson and Julianna Wisdom. The exhibition will last until October 31, 2021. Weekend opening hours are from 12pm to 5pm or reservation is required. 14800 Westminster Way N. is located on the Washington State coastline. 206-949-4007 or [email protection] 

Paul Horiuchi's work was included in the Northwest Masters Group Exhibition at Christian Grevstad Gallery Space at 312 Occidental Ave. S. Pioneer Square. M – F is for appointment only. 206-938-4360 or [email protection] 

Davidson Gallery has the following content-"Alone Together" focuses on the alienation and isolation in the current Internet age. This is a series of etchings/watercolor paintings exhibited by Takeda Azumi from October 8 to November 27, 2021. Humio Tomita's "Screen Prints" exhibition emphasizes that his bold patterns and swatches are being displayed. "Connected: The complete portfolio and kit includes more than 70 groupings of major print artists. All three shows are currently being watched until October 30, 2021. Reservations are encouraged. 313 Occidental Ave. S. in Seattle. 206- 624-7684 or visit davidsongalleries.com.

The downtown location of the Seattle Art Museum has the following points. "Monet of Etretat" explores the artist's paintings in the seaside village of Normandy, France. The exhibition was curated by Ishikawa Chiyo, the former deputy curator and curator of European painting and sculpture art, who retired in 2019 after working at the museum for 30 years. Ishikawa also wrote the exhibition catalog, and she can find virtual art talks about the exhibition on YouTube on the SAM channel. On display until October 17, 2021. In addition, there is "Pure Entertainment: The Wealth, Leisure, and Culture of the Late Chinese Empire". Another ongoing exhibition that will open on March 20, 2021 will be "Northwest Modernism: Four Japanese Americans", which will introduce Nomura Kenjiro, Kameyoshi Tokada, Paul Horiuchi and George Tsuta Chuan's works. The Seattle Asian Art Museum has the following. "Unbounded: The Story of Asian Art" is a group exhibition that reimagines the permanent collection of Asian art in the museum. "Be/longing: Contemporary Asian Art" shows the current trend of contemporary Asian art. In the courtyard of the Fuller Garden, you will see the installation work "Gathering" of Qianshan Tsutagawa. Tsutakawa Chinn is a New York LED light installation artist who grew up in Seattle. For detailed information on all of these, please visit seattleartmuseum.org. The museum’s new Saturday University series is based on the theme "Encounters Asia: Predators and Collectors". Exhibited with the Jackson Institute of International Studies at the University of Washington and Elliott Bay Book Company. The next in the series is travel writer Colin Thubron. He discussed his latest book "Amur River: Between Russia and China" with Brian Harden online at 10 am (Pacific Standard Time) on October 9, 2021. ". Launched in cooperation with Elliott Bay Book Company. Try [Email Protection] for more details. In SAAM's "Be/longing: Contemporary Asian Art" exhibition, there is a video about the "family tree" of artist Zhang Huan. To view it, visit samblog.seattleartmuseum.org. The Seattle Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park will reopen on May 28, 2021. Tickets are open every Thursday at 10 am. Tickets must be obtained in advance. The capacity is limited.

The Wing Luke Asian Museum will reopen on March 5, 2021. Business hours are from Friday to Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm. It is strongly recommended to book tickets online before visiting, as it has a limited operating capacity. The current exhibits include the following content-"Intertwined Roads" showcases the works of artists living in Taiwan and China with themes of identity, location and sense of belonging. Featured artists include Agnes Lee, ZZ Wei, Larine Chung, May Kytonen, Jenny Ku, Shin Yu Pai, Ellison Shieh and Monyee Chau, and they will continue to exhibit until November 7, 2021. Tateuchi provides on-site visits to Story Theare twice a day. "Hear Us Rise" is an exhibition that focuses on Asian-Pacific American women and other marginalized genders who challenge social expectations. The "Guilty Party" will be exhibited on November 16, 2021. This is a multi-media group exhibition of Asian-Pacific American artists curated by Justin Hoover. The upcoming exhibition is "Gerard Tsutakawa: The Story of Bronze Shape", which explores the inspiration, design and production process of Gerard Tsutakawa's public sculptures, and their physical, social and cultural impact on Seattle. There are also many virtual programs now. There is a virtual tour of the museum in the morning on weekdays. Private groups can be booked in advance. Contact the museum to register. Take a real-time virtual tour of Freeman Hotel every Thursday at 5pm (Pacific Daylight Time). Check what's in the gift shop through the museum's online marketplace. You can watch the monthly story time program at www.digitalwingluke.org/programs.

KOBO's art "selection" includes works by Tomoko Suzuki. They are composed of soft figure sculptures, expressing human potential. Higo's KOBO is now open every Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 11 am to 5 pm. You need to wear a mask, and you must use the provided hand sanitizer when entering. The 30-minute shopping time reserved at KOBO on Capitol Hill will soon be available through the online reservation system. The time period will be limited to ensure everyone's safety, and more protection protocols will be developed to comply with safety guidelines. By arranging the pickup time at checkout, delivery and curbside pickup are still available. They have a new instagram shopping account @koboseattleshop or try their website on koboseattle.com. The Capitol Hill store is located at 814 E. Roy St. and is open on Tuesdays. - Saturday. From noon to 5 pm. Congratulations on the 25th anniversary of KOBO. Higo's KOBO is located at 604 South Jackson Street, CID.

"Paper Dialogues: The Dragon and Our Stories" pairs the works of two paper-cut artists from two different cultures with the symbolic meaning of the dragon. The works of Danish paper-cutting artist Bit Vejle and Professor Qiao Xiaoguang of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing are exhibited together with a common dragon theme. The exhibition also includes works by Layla May Arthur and Emma Reid. October 28, 2021-January 31, 2022. A virtual art lecture called "Dialogue on Paper" will feature Bit Vejle on Saturday, October 30th. Free for members and $5 for the public. The National Nordic Museum is located in the Ballard neighborhood of Seattle at 2655 NW Market St. For more information, please visit nordicmuseum.org. 

The Bellevue Museum of Art is holding a collaborative exhibition of innovative glass works by Terri Grant and Purnima Patel called "Trace". 510 Bellevue Way NE, Bellevue, Washington State. 425-519-0770 or try bellevuearts.org.

 "World War Bonsai: Remembrance & Resilience" is the title of an exhibition curated by Aarin Packard at the Pacific Bonsai Museum. Catch the last chance for this exhibition, because it is about to end. This show tells a history rooted in racism, told through the living art of bonsai. It shows the powerful and inspiring unknown history of bonsai artists during World War II, and how they changed the course of bonsai art history forever. There are 32 bonsai, archive files and photos. The exhibition traces the practice of bonsai culture in the United States and Japan before and after World War II, during imprisonment, and during peacetime. Artists from Puget Sound, California, Colorado, Hawaii and Japan include Ben Oki, the Domoto family, Kelly Nishitani, Kenny Hikogawa and Joe Asahara, Ted Tsukiyama, Mas Imazumi, Kyuzo Murata, and Yuji Yoshimura. The exhibition also includes a site-specific artwork by Seattle artist Erin Shigaki, which includes wheat-paste images of individuals who played a role in the imprisonment of more than 120,000 Japanese Americans. Hurry up, now only ends in October 2021. 2515 South 336th St. in Federal Way, WA. Admission is through donations. Business hours are from Tuesday to Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm. 253-353-7345 or email [email protection].

The Tacoma Art Gallery will reopen on April 10, 2021. "Deconstructed Paintings: Selections from the Northwest Collection" includes works by Ed Aulerich-Sugai, Tram Bui, Donnabelle Casis, Paul Horiuchi, Fumiko Kimura, Roy Kiyooka, John Matsudaira, Mark Takamichi Miller, Kenjiro Nomura, Frank Okada, Joseph Park, Roger Shimomura , Maki Tamura, Kamekichi Tokita, George Tsutakawa, Thuy-Van Vu and many others. Watch for a long time. 1701 Pacific Avenue. 253-272-4258 or go to [Email Protection].

Opening on October 7, 2021 is "Red Chador: Genesis I." Tacoma artist/performer Anida Yoeu Ali’s installations and performances investigate the artistic, spiritual, and political collisions of mixed transnational identities. An era of increasing Islamophobia. Will perform at the opening reception on October 7, 2021 from 5 to 7 pm. The artist will deliver a speech at the closing reception at 2 pm on November 20, 2021. On the campus of Western Washington University at 516 High St. Fl 116, Bellingham, Washington. 360-650-3900 or try westgallery.wwu.edu. The time is Monday. - Saturday. From 10 am to 4 pm.

The outdoor sculpture collection on the campus of West Washington University in Bellingham is open to everyone. This is an outdoor collection of major sculptures from the late 20th century to the present, including works by Do Ho Suh, Sarah Sze and Isamu Noguchi. Get a map from the information kiosk and explore the campus collection for yourself. Call 360-650-3900.

The Jordan Schnitzer Art Museum at WSU is a new art space in eastern Washington. The first exhibition includes the following content-"Mirrors, Mirrors: Prints by Alison Thrall" will be on display until March 12, 2022, and the "Black People's Fate is also Fate Funded Exhibition" will be on display until December 18, 2021. At the same time, there is a virtual exhibition of "Art and Therapy". The museum plans to hold a retrospective of the artist Keiko Hara from eastern Washington in 2022. "Hara Keiko: Space Poetics, Four Decades of Painting" is scheduled from May 2022 to December 2022. The staff will organize a number of activities to visit the new space. If you are interested, please try https://museum.wsu.edu/about/meet-the-staff. 1535 Wilson Road on the Pullman campus of Washington State University. 509-335-1910 or try [email protection]

The Vancouver Museum has "A Seat at the Table: Chinese Immigrants and British Columbia", highlighting the importance of food and restaurant culture in the Chinese Canadian immigration experience. Located in Vanier Park, 1100 Chestnut Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 604-736-4431 or try museumofvancouver.ca.

Outsiders and other galleries held "Spiritual Works: The Art of Noviadi Ancasapura", a solo exhibition of this visionary Indonesian artist. October 1 to 31, 2021. 716 Hastings St. in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 604-499-5025 or try outsidersandothers.com.

SUM Gallery's "Eva Wong and Naoko Fukumaru: Mass Reincarnation of Wish Fragments (Ganhen Taiyou Tensei)" will open on October 28, 2021. The opening reception will be from 6 pm to 8 pm. This is an open collaborative art installation that combines traditional Japanese origami and gold splicing practices. The art residency will begin on October 14th, inviting the public to make origami butterflies and submit their wishes in the gallery for display. Pride in Art Society at 425-268 Keefer St., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 604-200-6661 or try sumgallery.ca.

The Chinese Cultural Center Museum at 555 Columbia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia is holding an exhibition titled "Passing on from Generation to Generation-The History of Chinese Canadians in British Columbia". 604-658-8880 or visit cccvan.com.

The Vancouver Art Gallery's "Freedom to Grow: The Guidance of Yoko Ono/The Art of John and Yoko" will open on October 9, 2021. Located at 750 Hornby Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Go to https://ww.vanartgallery.bc.ca/.

Before October 24, 2021, Paula Nishikawara will exhibit an immersive underwater installation experience called "If I Live in the Ocean" at the Vancouver Maritime Museum in Vanier Park. 1905 Ogden Ave. in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 604-257-8300 or vanmaritime.com.

The Gage Gallery Arts Collective, an art installation called "Fragments" created by Heather Midori Yamada, will be on display until October 10, 2021. 19 Fort Square in downtown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. 250-592-2760 or gagegallery.ca.

Bau-Xi Gallery will exhibit new figurative works by Vancouver painter Michelle Nguyen at 3045 Granville Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada from October 16th to 30th, 2021. 604-733-7011 or bau-xi.com.

"Broken Commitment" is a 7-year multidisciplinary, multi-agency, community-based project that explores the deprivation of Japanese Canadians in the 1940s. It illustrates the loss of homes and the struggle for justice in an ethnically marginalized community. The group exhibition, which will open on June 27, 2021, is titled "The Will of Steel: Women in STEM", which showcases inspirational women such as Irene Uchida, Donna Stricklan and Jocelyn Bell Burnell and their work in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Important contribution. The exhibition addresses many structural and cultural barriers that lead to gender bias and underrepresentation of women in these fields. Also on display is the ongoing exhibition "TAIKEN: Japanese Canadians since 1877". "SAFE/Home", which opens on October 23, 2021, is a collaborative project between Kellen Hatanaka and Alexa Hatanaka. Through the lens of the historic Vancouver Asahi baseball team, these artists explore the issues of race, xenophobia, representation, and implicit prejudice relevant to today's sports and society. The Burnaby Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Center is located at 6688 Southoaks Crescent. 604-777-7000 or try nikkeiplace.org.

"Relationship: Diaspora and Painting" is a group exhibition organized by the PHI Contemporary Art Foundation. There are 27 artists from Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom whose ancestors are mainly rooted in Africa and Asia. Curated by Cheryl Sim. Some participating artists include Bharti Kher, Jordan Nassar, Marigold Santos, Mickalene Thomas, Yinka Shonobare CBE and Yoko Ono. On display until November 27, 2021. 1011 – 9 th Ave. SE – 4th floor in Calgary, Canada. 403-930-2490 or try eskerfoundation.art.

The New Media Gallery in New Westminster, Canada hosted a group exhibition called "Assembly", which included works by Elizabeth Price, Fiona Tan and Zimoun. The exhibition will last until December 5, 2021. The artists considered the human power and data to collect, classify and control knowledge. At the Anvil Center at 777 Columbia Street-3 rd Flr. 604-515-3834 or try newmediagallery.ca.

The Surrey Art Museum in Surrey, Canada is hosting "What If?", a multimedia exhibition that amplifies the story of Sandeep Johal's flexible South Asian women. It will open on September 18, 2021. 13750 88 Ave. 604-501-5566 or go to Surrey.ca/Art Gallery.

Canadian artist Matthew Wong suffers from autism spectrum disorder. He was also diagnosed with Tourette syndrome when he was a teenager. He struggled with depression all his life and committed suicide in 2019. However, this Toronto-born artist studied anthropology, specializing in photography and writing poetry, and finally found his own painting career in 2013. Mainly self-taught, he created more than 1,000 paintings and worked in a span of several years. Now, the "Blue View" exhibition displays more than 40 works created by him between 2017 and 2019, and is exhibited at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada. 317 Dundas St. W. Visited until April 18, 2022. 416-979-6648 or try ago.ca.

The Jordan Schnitzer Museum on the campus of the University of Oregon in Eugene will display the following exhibits-"Korean Ceramic Culture: The Heritage of Earth and Fire", which will last until May 8, 2022. Lavenberg & Michels Collection" will open on July 31, 2021. "Countless Treasures-Celebrating the Reinstallation of the Sauron Museum of Chinese Art" exhibition until June 30, 2022. 1430 Johnson Lane, Eugene, Oregon. 541- 346-3027.

Portland Japanese Garden 611 SW Kingston Ave. 503-223-1321 or japanesegarden.org.

The Oregon Japanese American Museum is now open in a new space. Current exhibits include the following-"Oregon's Nikkei Index: America's Resilience Story" and "Grace, Courage, and Garman: Japanese American Women Through Generations" curated by Martha Matthews and Linda Tamura , The exhibition will last until December 2021. Some online exhibitions about history can also be viewed by Japanese Americans in Oregon. 411 NW Flanders. 503-224-1458 or email [email protection].

The Portland Chinatown Museum has the following content-their permanent exhibition is "Outside the Door: The Story of Portland's Historic Chinatown". Seattle photojournalist Dean Wong's photographic essay on "The Future of Chinatown" will open on October 16, 2021, and will last until February 6, 2022. It will look at the gentrification and displacement of four West Coast Chinatowns. A series of virtual and live events and public programs are planned around this exhibition. 127 NW Third Ave. 503-224-0008 or email [email protection]

"Shadows of the Past-Sansheng Artists and American Concentration Camps" is a virtual group exhibition jointly organized by Celadon Art and San Joaquin Delta Academy and curated by Gail Ens. Artists participating in this exhibition include Lydia Nakajima Degarode, Fujii Reiko, Kubo Lucian, Maruyama Wendy, Nakajima Tom, No Omi Judy Shintani, Masako Takasashi and Jerry Takigawa. The next physical venue for this touring exhibition will be held at the Monterey Museum of Art from September 9, 2021 to January 9, 2022. 559 Pacific St. 831-372-5477 or montereyart.org.

Photographer Jerry Takigawa's photographic memoirs about his family story and the detention of Japanese Americans during World War II will be exhibited in a solo exhibition (also a book) called "Balanced Culture" at the Viewpoint Photographic Art Center in Sacramento, California . The exhibition will last until October 7, 2021. 2015 "J" St. Suite 101. 916-441-2341 or [Email Protection].

The San Francisco Asian Art Museum is currently exhibiting the following content. "Lost at sea: recovering from a shipwreck". "Zheng Chongbin: I'm looking for the sky." "After Hope: Video of Resistance." Site-specific installation-"Momento: Jayashree Chakravarty and Lam Tung Pang". The exterior murals of Channel Miller and Jennifer K. Wofford can be seen from 200 Larkin St. Hyde Street in San Francisco, California. 415-581-3500.

The De Young Museum in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park has the following content-The exhibition titled "Golden Gate" by the famous Bay Area artist Hung Liu will open on July 17, 2021 and will continue to be on display until January 2, 2022 . 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden is driving in San Francisco, California. 415-750-3600.

The Berkeley Museum of Art/PFA has the following contents. "Beyond Boundaries: Gandhara's Buddhist Art" is on display until October 3, 2021. "Seki Ding Kai: Geometry" will be on display until October 24, 2021. 155 Centre St. Berkeley, CA 510-642-0808 or visit [email] protected].

The San Jose Museum of Art has the following contents. "Karma" is a 23-foot tall sculpture by Do Ho Suh, which will be on display until January 30, 2022. Later this summer, European artist Hito Steyerl's large installation "Solar Factory" will open on August 6, 2021. 110 South Market Street in San Jose, California. 408-271-6840.

Amrita Singhal's "Search, Memory-Solo Exhibition of Paintings, Prints and Handicrafts" will be on display until October 23, 2021. Shoh Gallery at 700 Gilman Street, Berkeley, California. 510-504-9988.

"Guo Pei: Fashion Fantasy" will celebrate the design of Guo Pei, known as China's first womenswear designer, including more than 80 works from the past two decades, highlighting her most important shows in Beijing and Paris fashion shows Series. The exhibition will be on display at the Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco until September 5, 2022. The exhibition was organized by Jill D'Alessandro, the curator of clothing and textile art at the San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts. 100 – 34 th Ave. 415-750-3600 or try https://legionofhonor.famsf.org.

The Japanese American National Museum (JANM) has the following content-what is in progress is "common ground-the core of the community", including a Japanese internment camp building during World War II. Just opened is "Mine Okubo's Masterpiece-Citizen's Art 13660". This exhibition showcases all the paintings from one of its residents, the artist Mine Okubo's seminal book on camp life. In addition to the drawings in the book, the exhibition also includes rough sketches and ideas behind the book, as well as a series of colorful concrete works created by her in the post-World War II career. Before the artist's death, she left a considerable part of her art archive to the museum. The exhibition will last until February 20, 2022. "Fragmented Life-A Quick Look at Stanley's Diary and Letters" is on display until January 9, 2022. The diary and wartime letters of the Los Angeles native came to life with the 3D virtual experience accessed through the smartphone from the heart mountain concentration camp and the European war. His works of art, diary and letters will also be exhibited. Hayami died in Italy at the age of 19. His short legacy continues in this exhibition created by Emblematic's Nonny de la Pena and Sharon Yamato in collaboration with JANM. 101 N. Central Ave. 213-625-0414 in Los Angeles, California.

"Yoshitomo Nara" is a retrospective of the Japanese artist, known for his childlike characters, and they frown before January 2, 2022. "Ink Dreams: Selections From The Foundation INK Collection" is a group exhibition of contemporary paintings, sculptures and videos inspired by traditional East Asian ink art. The exhibition will last until December 12, 2021. LACMA is located at 5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles. 323-857-6010 or visit lacma.org.

"Memory, Structure, Scaffolding Series" is an installation that focuses on the hidden contribution of labor. On display until March 20, 2022. The Wade Museum at 10808 Culver Avenue, Culver, California. 310-216-1600 or visit wendemuseum.org.

"Waves-The New Trend of Japanese Graphic Art" is a traveling exhibition of works by 55 contemporary Japanese illustrators and graphic artists. The exhibition will last until November 28, 2021. The Japanese House at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard, Hollywood, California. Visit japanhousela.com.

The Pacific Asia Museum of the University of Southern California in Pasadena, California will open on October 22, 2021-"Crossroads-Exploring the Silk Road". This new permanent exhibition tells the story of cultural exchanges inspired by the flow of tourists and goods along ancient times over the centuries. Trade route. In the fall of 2021, a group exhibition entitled "Intervention: Perspectives from the New PAM" will be exhibited. "Global Asia: Contemporary Asian and Asian American Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation" will come to the museum from March to June 2023. 2680 N. Los Robles Ave. in Pasadena, CA. 626-787-2680 or [email protection].

"Fluxes Mean Change: Jean Brown's Avant-Garde Archives" is an exhibition showing the rich works of artists in the contemporary art movement, including Nam June Paik, Yoko Ono, Mieko Shiomi, Ay-O, Takako Saito and many others . Exhibition until January 2, 2022. The Getty Center at 1200 Getty Center in Los Angeles. 310-440-7300 or visit getty.edu.

"No Humans Involved" examines the categories we use to decide who gets or doesn't receive humane treatment. This group exhibition includes Wang Shui's mixed media installations and video works, highlighting the Chinese spirit and queer emotions in architecture. "Witch Hunt" is a group exhibition of contemporary feminism, including works by Zheng Shuli. The two exhibitions will be on display from October 10, 2021 to January 9, 2022. The Hammer Museum at UCLA. Visit hammer.ucla.edu. 10899 Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles. The "Witch Hunt" exhibition is divided into two parts, one of which will be exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Art, 1717 E. 7 th St. 213-928-0833. TheIcala.org.

"Pachappa Camp: America's First Korean Town" will be on display from October 9, 2021 to January 9, 2022. Photos, maps, documents and mayfly can recall the history of this Korean-American agricultural worker community in the early 20th century. UCR Arts at 3824-34 Main Street, Riverside, California. For more information, please visit [E-mail Protection].

The Santa Barbara Museum of Art has been refurbished and a new gallery dedicated to contemporary art has been built. In the first group exhibition, you will see the works of Anish Kapoor, Helen Frankenthaler, Roger Shimomura and others. It is valid until December 5, 2021. 1130 State St. Visit sbma.net.

"Origami in the Garden-A Giant Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition" will be on display at the Missouri Botanical Garden until October 10, 2021. These sculptures, created by Santa Fe artists Jennifer and Kevin Box, tell the story of Japanese origami art. These large metal sculptures were created in collaboration with world-renowned origami artists such as Treff and Beth Johnson. 4344 Xiao Avenue. St. Louis, Missouri. 314-577-5100 or visit events.missouribotanicalgarden.org.

The National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, DC will exhibit the first large-scale retrospective of the internationally renowned Chinese-American artist Liu Hong. "Liu Hong: Portrait of the Promised Land, 1968-2020" will exhibit more than 50 works, covering Liu in Mao Zedong's China in the 1960s, emigrating to California in the 1980s, and the peak of her career today. This is the first time a museum has held a solo exhibition to celebrate Asian American women. The opening of the exhibition coincides with the 2021 Asian-Pacific American Tradition Month. The exhibition will last until January 9, 2022. 

The National Museum of Asian Art/Sackler Gallery in the Smithsonian Shopping Center in Washington, DC will exhibit the following works-"Meeting the Buddha: Art and Practice across Asia". The exhibition will last until January 17, 2022. At the beginning of the 20th century, Japanese artist Tomioka Tessai. "Prehistoric Spiral: Pottery from Thailand" displays works from northeastern Thailand more than 2,000 years ago. Opened on November 1, 2021.1050 Independence Ave. SW. Washington DC

The Boston Museum of Fine Arts has the following exhibits-"Weng's Collection of Chinese Paintings: Travel and Home" until March 6, 2022. "Conservation Action: Japanese Buddhist Sculpture in the New Light" until July 3, 2022. 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. 617-267-9300 or visit mfa.org.

Candace Lin held an exhibition of her installations at the Carpenter Visual Arts Center. February 4 to April 10, 2022. 617 Quincy Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Harvard University campus. 617-496-5387 or try https://carpenter.center.

The Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts has the following exhibit-"Zarah Hussain: Breath", which will last until January 2, 2022. 161 Essex St. in Salem, MA 816-745-4876 or visit pem.org.

On the basis of art: Yale’s 150 Years of Women" celebrates the works of female artists who have studied at the institution. Including Maya Lin, Rina Banerjee, An-My Le and many others. It will be exhibited at Yale University Art Museum until 2022. January 9, 2012. 1111 Church Street, New Haven, Connecticut. 203-432-0600 or go to [email protection]

The Minneapolis Institute of Art has the following project-"20 Dances: Japanese Calligraphy Then and Now" until January 2, 2022. "Shiny Surface: Chinese Lacquerware Patterns and Techniques" will be on display until April 10, 2022. "Captive Beauty: Depicting Late Chinese Women" until November 28, 2021. "Private Space: The Bedroom of the Late Chinese Aristocratic Women" is on display until November 7, 2021. "Sunbeam: Himalayan, South and Southeast Asian Art Galleries Reinstalled by MIA" will be on display until October 7, 2021. "Amano Kazumi: Prints from the Kimm-Grufferman Collection" until November 29, 2021. "Pothl Khana by Dayanita Singh: Archives", November 12, 2021 to April 10, 2022. 2400 Third Avenue. Minneapolis, Minnesota 888-642-2787.

The Walker Art Center has the following content-Candace Lin's exhibition titled "Exudation, Rotation, Rest, Weeping", which will last until January 1, 2022. A sound and video installation by Twin Cities artist Shen Xin on November 17, 2021-July 2, 2022. "Paul Chan: Breathers" will be exhibited from July 27, 2022 to April 22, 2023. The Pacita Abid retrospective is scheduled to be held at 2023.725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, MN. 612-375-7600 or try [email protected].

The Art Institute of Chicago has the following exhibition-"Fantasy Landscape: Hokusai and Hiroshige" exhibition until October 11, 2021. "Onchi Koshiro: Love of Intangible Things" will open on October 16, 2021, and will continue to be exhibited until January 10, 2022. Onchi Koshiro is the main character of the "Sosaku Hanga" movement in Japan. This is a group in which members conceive, sculpt and print their own works, abandoning the old division of labor system. His favorite mode is abstract work. His prints are very few, and there is usually only one version of each work. "Senju's Chicago Falls" will open on November 13, 2021, and will continue to be exhibited until March 13, 2022. These flowing water screen paintings were specially created for the gallery 109 designed by architect Tadao Ando. Senju tailored the scale and lighting to best suit the unique space. The lighting design in the gallery is to highlight the nature of the falling water in the painting in the light and dark. 111 South Michigan Ave./159 E. Monroe. Chicago, Illinois. 312-443-3600.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has the following exhibits-"Japan: A History of Style" until April 24, 2022. "Celebrate the Year of the Ox" until January 12, 2022. "Masters and Masterpieces: The Owen Collection of Chinese Art" until June 5, 2022. "The Bodhisattva of Wisdom, Compassion and Power" until October 16, 2022. "Lonely Companion in Chinese Art-Retreat and Communion" until August 14, 2022. The Metropolitan Museum's online newsletter "The Met" has the following content-"Beyond Beauty: Shiseido and Hanatsubaki Magazine". This magazine has been a barometer of Japanese style and culture for nearly 100 years. "Art and activism in Chinatown- Past and Present" In this show, artists Fumi Arai and Merrill Lynch discussed this topic. 1000 Fifth Avenue. 212-535-7710. Go to https://www.metmuseum.org.

The Korean Association organized a group exhibition called "Interlace Scanning". The exhibition challenges the traditional concepts of fiber and textile art by adopting established techniques of weaving, embroidery, and combining new materials and forms. On display until January 28, 2022. The online exhibition "Feelings of Korea: Marie Ann Yoo" will be on display until December 16, 2021. The photos of this Korean-American photographer depict South Korea and its people and culture in a transitional period after the war in 1956. They also have a series of art lectures by contemporary artists, including November 2, 2021 at 5 pm (Eastern Time) and Ja Young Yoon on November 30, 2021 at 5 pm (Eastern Time). 350 Madison, 24th floor, New York City. 212-759-7525 or visit koreasociety.org. 

"Diane Serin Nguyen: If Revolution is a Disease" is the artist's first solo exhibition. This is a newly commissioned video work set in Warsaw. This film tells the story of an orphaned Vietnamese child who is attracted by a Korean pop dance company. On display until December 13, 2021. Held at the Sculpture Center at 44-19 Purves Street, Long Island, New York. 1-718-361-1750 or try Sculpture Center.org.

The Asia Society Museum has the following exhibits-"Rebellious Clowns, Mystics, Poets: Contemporary Persians", which will be on display from September 10, 2021 to January 16, 2022. 725 Park Avenue, New York City. 212-327-9721 or visit www.Asian Society.

Indian photographer Gauri Gill will hold a new work exhibition entitled "A Time To Play: New Scenes From Acts of Appearance" at James Cohan Gallery in New York City from October 7th to November 13th, 2021. 52 Walker St. – 2 nd Floor. 212-714-9500 or try [email protection]

Sawangwongse Yawngwe, an exiled Myanmar artist, will hold an exhibition of his new work titled "Cappuccino in Exile" at Jane Lombard Gallery until October 23, 2021. 58 White St. 212-967-8040 or [email protection]

 "Awakening: A Journey of Enlightenment in Tibetan Buddhism" is a new exhibition at the Rubin Museum of Art curated by Elena Pakhoutova. The exhibition will last until January 3, 2022 . The exhibition is organized by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The exhibition guides visitors on a journey of enlightenment, demonstrating the power of Tibetan Buddhist art to concentrate and refine consciousness. Accompanying the exhibition are audio guides and catalogs. A new podcast called "The Awakening" hosted by musician/composer Laurie Anderson will premiere on June 8, 2021. It features the transformation stories of Aparna Nancheria, Alok Vaid-Menon, Tara Branch and others. Get podcasts on RubinMuseum.org/awakenPOD and other major podcast platforms. "Mandala Lab" is the museum's new social, emotional and ethical healing interactive space. Designed by Peterson Rich Office, it invites visitors to participate in five unique experiences inspired by Tibetan Buddhist mandalas. Until October 1, 2031. "Shrine Room Projects: Shiva Ahmadi, Genesis Breyer P-orridge, and Tsherin Sherpa" feature three artists who create works inspired by the museum's Buddhist sacred sites in a multimedia format. On display until November 12, 2021. The "Gate of Himalayan Art" will be on display until June 5, 2023. The "Himalayan Art Tour" will be on display until January 8, 2024. "150 West 17 th St. in New York City. 212-620-5000 or visit rubinmuseum.org.

The Fifth Triennial of the New Museum is titled "Soft Water Hard Rocks", which is an investigation of artists transcending established methods to reshape traditional models, materials and techniques. Includes works by Jes Fan, Kaurie Kang, Kang Seung Lee, Yu Ji, Thao Nguyen Phao, Amy Lien/Enzo Camacho and many others. 235 Bowery in New York City. October 28, 2021 – January 23, 2022. 212-219-1222. Visit http://www.newmuseum.org.

The late video artist Shigeko Kubota regarded video technology as a "new paintbrush." Now, the Museum of Modern Art has curated a retrospective exhibition called "Liquid Reality" for her, which will last until January 1, 2022. 11 West 53rd Street, Manhattan, New York City. Please visit moma.org for details.

Installation artist Ian Cheng brought his latest work to The Shed in New York. Cheng uses artificial intelligence and video game technology to explore the nature of human consciousness. "Life After Bob: A Study of the Holy Grail" is a "narrative animation" inspired by his daughter. The exhibition will last until December 19, 2021. Located in the Bloomberg Building at 545 West 30th Street in New York City. 646-455-3494 or email [email protection]

The Noguchi Museum has the following content-"Noguchi's Useless Building" is an exhibition inspired by his visit to India's astronomical equipment. On display until May 8, 2022. "Objects of common interest: hard, soft, and nowhere to go" is a collaboration with Eleni Petaloti and Leonidas Trampoukis of Greece and objects of common interest to the New York studio to watch until February 13, 2022. You can also watch various video programs about the history and life of Noguchi. 9-01, 33 rd Rd. Long Island, New York. 718-204-7088.

The Japan Association has the following content-"Wooden improvisation: KawamataxMunakata". This exhibition includes the main works of two famous Japanese artists from different eras. Takashi Kawamata pays tribute to the Japanese Society Building and early artist Munakata by juxtaposing the collection of Munakata prints with Kawamata's new works and archival materials. September 30, 2021 to January 16, 2022. 333 East 47 th St. New York, New York. 212-263-1258.

The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx will display the following exhibits-"KUSAMA: Cosmic Nature" until October 31, 2021. Through these works, Yayoi Kusama shows her lifelong fascination with nature. On display are flower sculptures that change the landmark landscape of the space. Her immortal sculptures "Dancing Pumpkin" and "I Want to Fly to the Universe" are also here. And this summer will be her "Infinite Mirror Room-Inner Illusion", which will reflect the light outside. Timed tickets will be sold in installments. 2900 South Avenue. The Bronx, New York. 718-817-8700 or try nybg.org.

The Museum of Chinese in America reopened with the exhibition "Respond to: Asian Americans Resist the Wave of Racism". The exhibition was criticized by the artists, who withdrew from the exhibition to protest the support of city funds for the museum. At the same time, the museum also has a controversial city plan to set up a new prison facility in Chinatown. The museum has always insisted that it does not support prisons, but critics in the community believe that you can't get financial benefits from it while opposing something. 215 Downtown Street, New York. For information, please try [email protected].

"The New Women Behind the Camera" is a group exhibition composed of more than 100 international photographers from the early 20th century. Including many female photographers from Asia. October 31 to January 30, 2022. National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. Sixth Street and Constitution Northwest. 

The Museum of Art of the Americas launched "The Sea Between Us: The Art of the Asian Diaspora in Latin America and the Caribbean in 1945-Now", which is now on display indefinitely. Artists represented include Carlos Runcie Tanaka, Bernadette Persaud, Wilfredo Lam and Sri Irodik Romo. Featured videos of Yukata Toyota and Laura Fong Prosper. Curated by Adriana Ospina. 201 – 18 th St. NW in Washington, DC For more information, please visit [Email Protection] or museum.oas.org.

"The Most Important Thing: Zen Buddhism in Medieval Japan-Calligraphy Paintings in Museum Collections" to be held from February 26 to July 24, 2022. The Freer Art Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Jefferson Drive is at 12 th St. SW. Try asia.si.edu for details.

"Revealing Krishna: A Journey to the Sacred Mountain of Cambodia" (one of the earliest major Hindu sites in Southeast Asia) is an exhibition that aims to make the Hindu god "Krishna Raise Govardan Mountain" in the museum collection in its original The use of virtual reality and loans from Cambodia and France can be seen in the background. It will be exhibited from November 14, 2021 to January 3, 2022. Cleveland Museum of Art. 11150 East Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. For more information, please visit clevelandart.org.

"Brilliance of Weaving: Treasures of Asian Textiles" showcases rare Chinese, Indian, Japanese and Persian costumes and textiles in the museum's collection. On display until March 6, 2022. Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. 4525 Oak Street, Kansas City, Missouri. 816-751-1278 or try [email protection]

The New Orleans Art Museum has the following content-"The Pursuit of Salvation: Jain Art from India" until May 15, 2022. The Indian Jain faith is older than Buddhism, but it is little known outside India. This exhibition displays sculptures, ink and watercolor paintings and manuscripts, opening a window to this fascinating religion. "Orientalism: Take and Making" will be on display until January 2, 2022. "Buddha and Shiva, Lotus and Dragon: Masterworks From The Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3 rd Collection at Asia Society" will be on display until May 31, 2022. Collins C. Du Boer, New Orleans City Park, Louisiana Circle One. 504-658-4100.

The British Museum has an exhibition called "The Great Picture Book of All Things: Hokusai". This exhibition includes drawings for an encyclopedia that has never been published. This box of Japanese woodblock print genius works of art will be exhibited from September 30, 2021 to January 30, 2022 and is part of the museum's permanent collection. Curated by Timothy Clark. The museum is located on Great Russell Street in London. 44 (0) 20 7323 8000 or try [email protected].

The British Japan Association invited Rosina Buckland, the curator of the Japanese Collection at the British Museum, to publish the title "The Curator’s Journey Through Objects: With Rosina Buckland at 6:30 pm (British Summer Time) on Thursday, October 21st. Dialogue" online speech. For more information, please visit japansociety.org.uk.

The Tate Modern will exhibit the following content-a conversation with New York installation artist Anick Yi on October 15, 2021 at 6:30 pm (UK time). There is also an exhibition titled "Sculpture and Printing", which was exhibited by London-born artist Kim Lim, who was born in Singapore. He showed his sculptures and prints, and the audience can see how they are related to each other. of. "Medical Network: Yin Xiuzhen" is a sculpture exhibition hanging from the ceiling. The exhibition will last until November 2021. The traveling exhibition entitled "Surrealism beyond national boundaries" will be on display at the Tate Modern from February 24 to August 29, 2022 and will feature works by Japanese artist Koga Harue. "Haegue Yang's "Materials & Objects" exhibition will last until November 21, 2021. Tate St. Ives will also hold her first museum exhibition in the UK for Thao Nguyen Pham in February 2022. The exhibition will It runs until May 2, 2022. It will include videos, paintings and mixed media works. For more information on all of these, please visit tate.org.uk.

"Ksama Yayoi: Retrospective" continued its world tour, stopping in Berlin and Tel Aviv. April 23 to August 2022. Gropius Bau is in Berlin. Niederkirchner Stra Be7, 10963 Berlin. Tel Aviv Art Museum from November 2nd to April 23rd, 2022. Golda Meier Culture and Art Center, Tel Aviv-Yafo sderot sha'ul HaMelech Blvd., Israel. 972-3-6077020.

The Tokyo National Museum has the following exhibits-"Imported Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy from Edo Japan" until October 17, 2021. "14 Dynasties and One Region: History and Culture of the Muslim World-Collection of the Islamic Art Museum of Malaysia" will be on display until February 10, 2022. "Commemorating the 1200th Anniversary of the Longest Death: The Buddhist Art of Tiantai Sect" will open on October 12 and will be on display until November 21, 2021. 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito District, Tokyo. 81 – (50) – 5541 – 8600.

The Tokyo National New Art Center will hold a retrospective exhibition for Hideaki Anno, which is scheduled from October 1st to December 19th, 2021. 7-22-2 Roppongi Minato-Ku Tokyo 106-8558. For more information, please visit https://www.annohideakiten.jp/.

"Genkyo Yokoo Tadanori" is a retrospective of the artist's main works, including 30 new paintings created in the past COVID year. He became famous as a graphic designer and illustrator in the 1970s, but later ventured into the field of painting. On display until October 17, 2021. The Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art is located in 4-1-1 Miyoshi, Koto-ku, Tokyo. 81-50-5541-8600 (Hello dialing).

"The Midway of Mystery and Symbol: Kusama's Monochrome" eliminates the myth that Yayoi Kusama's palette is full-color, and immerses her in black and white. On display at her own Tokyo Museum until December 26, 2021. Yayoi Kusama Museum, address: 107 Bentencho, Shinjiku City, Tokyo 81 3-5273-1778.

"Mountain City Qianhuazi: Reshaping the Land/Mind/Body Landscape" is on display until October 10, 2021. The work created by this artist/filmmaker directly confronts the historical and geopolitical conditions of Okinawa where she was born, as well as her relationship to these issues. I also watched Hayao Miyazaki's exhibitions "Reversible Destiny-Contemporary Photography in Australia and Japan" and "Current Wildlife". Both exhibitions will last until October 31, 2021. The Tokyo Photographic Art Museum is located in Ebisu Garden Plaza, 1-13-3, Sanda Meguro District, Tokyo. 03-3280-0099.

Ginza No. 6 is a department store that uses different artists to design floor-to-ceiling interior design. Currently on display until April 15, 2022 is a Shinto-inspired installation by Kyoto artist Kohei Nawa, a deer floating above the clouds called "Transformed Garden". Download to the corresponding application, you can see the installation on your phone lifelike. 6-10 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo. https://ginza6.tokyo.e.abf.hp.transer.com/news/94805.

"Tange Kenzo 1938 – 1970: From the pre-war period to the Olympics and World Expos" will be on display until October 10, 2021. This retrospective focuses on the main projects that made the architect famous, but also introduces little-known early works. Tokyo National Archives of Modern Architecture 4 Chome-6-15, Bunkyo City, Yushima, Tokyo. 81-3-3812-3401.

 "Video in the Body: The Art and Life of Kubota Shigeko". Kubota produced some works called video sculptures. I once saw her refreshing ode to Duchamp in the original art museum, which consisted of bicycle wheels with video monitors. This retrospective includes drawings and documents found in her own archives, as well as works selected from the Japanese collection. From November 13, 2021 to February 23, 2022. Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art, address: 4-1-1 Miyoshi, Koto Ku, Tokyo, Japan. 81-50-5541-8600 (Hello dialing).

Artist Manish Nai held his first solo exhibition in New Delhi, titled "Rebirth Vision". He uses the most inconspicuous materials to create exquisite artworks full of meaning and potential. It will be exhibited at Nature Morte Dhan Mill Gallery in October 2021. 287, 288, 100 feet of road. Chattapur Hill, New Delhi, India. For more information, please visit www.naturemorte.com.

"Material Scars" is an exhibition of sculptures and photography by Asim Waqif at Norte Morte Vasant Vihar. 7Poorvi Marg, Block A, Vsant Vihar, New Delhi, India.

Hyonjeong Kim Han was selected as the new Joseph de Heer Asian Art Curator at the Denver Art Museum. She will oversee the museum’s Asian art collection and will continue to bring world-class special exhibitions to Denver and display the museum’s own collections. Since 2010, she has served as the director and associate curator of the Korean Art Department at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. 

"The New York Times" fashion magazine "T" recently published an article entitled "12 Geniuses Shaping the Design World". The profile includes furniture designer Minjae Kim, floral designer Doan Ly, and carpet and textile designer Arati Rao.

The Paris Photo and Aperture Foundation recently announced their shortlist for the 2021 Paris Photo Aperture Foundation Photo Book Award. Jody Quan, Director of Photography of New York Magazine, is one of the judges. Nominated for the "First Photo Book" award are Indu Antony, Tarrah Krajnak, Luke Le, Kanta Nomura and Sasha Pjyars-Burgess. Nominated for "Photobook of the Year" are Muhamad Fadii and Fatris, Rahim Fortune and Vasantha Yogananthan. Nominations for the "Catalog of the Year" are Mao Ishikawa and Zora J. Murdd/Rana Young. 

The Textile Art Committee of the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco held a lecture by Dr. Genevieve Duggan on "Ikat Textiles in Savu Island, Eastern Indonesia" on October 16, 2021 (Saturday) at 10 am (Pacific Time). US$5 for SFAMSF members and students, US$10 for the public. Free for TAC members. For more information, please visit textileartscouncil.org.

The Seattle Metropolitan Chamber Orchestra will make its Shostakovich debut with cellist Nathan Chan on Friday, October 8, 2021, at 7:30 pm at Seattle City Hall. This is just a face-to-face concert. The Seattle City Hall also announced their "Global Rhythm Series" for 2021/22. Of particular interest to our readers is the following-Homayoun Sakhi will perform "Traditional Afghan Ruba (Dual Chamber Lut), Reimagined" on Saturday, December 4th at 7:30pm (Pacific Standard Time). Ak Danguang Chil will provide vibrant Korean shamanic folk music at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time) on Friday, June 17, 2022. 1119 8th Avenue. 206-504-2857. To get tickets and see the full schedule, please visit townhallseattle.org.

Washin Kai, Friends of Classical Japan organizes an event to encourage appreciation of Japanese classical literature and culture. This year's show is Japanese Noh drama. On October 13, 2021 (Wednesday) at 7pm (Pacific Daylight Time), Noh master Sumori Takeda will perform in a show called "Noh World". Register at https://asian.washington.edu/washin-kai-events.

The "Diwali-Light of India" celebration, which is usually held in Seattle Center this year, is virtual. Listen on Facebook and Youtube from 12 noon to 4:30 pm on October 23, 2021. 

The Edmunds Arts Center revealed their upcoming season. Activities that our readers may be interested in are as follows-October 9, 2021 at 6 pm (Pacific Standard Time), the Hawaii Song and Dance Night starring Robert Cazimero and Kuana Torres Kahele. Ak Dan Gwang Chil, a Korean shaman folk pop band, will perform at 7:30pm (Pacific Standard Time) on November 5, 2021. Ensemble Mik Nawooj held two concerts. The first show will be the education matinee at 10 am on February 10, 2022 and the evening concert at 7:30 pm (Pacific Standard Time) on the same day. The most popular "Master of Hawaiian Music" of the year will return at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time) on March 26, 2022. 410 Fourth Avenue, Edmonds, Washington. 425-275-9595.

Henry Art Gallery, On the Boards and Velocity Dance Center collaborated to host a series of performances, films and installations, including indoor and outdoor advertising, in the Seattle area from August to November 2021. Among them, OTB presented the Fallen Art Troupe in the "Gatherers of Spring" held in Western Plaza in October 2021. This work explores the animism and the connection and disconnection between humans and the natural world. It includes director/performer Haruko Crow Nishimura, composer/musician Joshua Kohl and video artist Leo Mayberry, with costumes designed by Wyly Astley. For more information, please visit ontheboards.org.

Harissa Mediterranean cuisine offers "Harissa's Friday Night Jazz" from 9pm to midnight every Friday. Starring Bob Antolin, Norm Bellas and Ernesto Rediancco. Cover of 5 dollars. 2255 NE 65 th St. in Seattle. For reservations, please call 206-588-0650.

STG Productions operates in several theaters in the city, and they have announced their upcoming live broadcast schedule for 2021-22. Comedian Hasan Minhaji launched a new show "King's Jester" at the Paramount Theater at 7pm on November 12th, returning to his storytelling roots. Malaysian comedian/actor and comedy central star Ronny Chieng will perform at Neptune on Sunday, December 12. On Monday, February 14, 2022, Yamato drummers from Nara, Japan will beat the rafters with their giant Taiko drums at the Moore Theater. For more information, please visit STG.org.

"Create your own series", choose any 5 concerts and save the Seattle Symphony Orchestra's upcoming "live broadcast" for the 2021-22 season. Some highlights include the following-Seattle Symphony Orchestra conductor Thomas Dausgaard on October 7th and 9th with Patricia Kopatchinskaja (Patricia Kopatchinskaja) and soprano Adelila Fazoo Adelila Faizullina conducted the orchestra to play the violin on October 14th and 16th in the "Rachmaninoff Symphony" program. Violin master Ray Chen performed the "Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto" under the direction of Michael Sanderling on November 4th, 6th and 7th. Tenor Nicholas Phan and guest conductor Lee Mills performed a series of special performances around the "Vienna New Year" on December 30, 31 and January on January 2, 2022. Contemporary composer John Adams conducts a symphony at a concert called "The Music of John Adams", which is scheduled for January 6-8, 2022. The beloved violinist Itzhak Perlman and the pianist Rohand Silva perform Perlman at a concert called "Itzhak Night" on January 18, 2022. Pop singer/songwriter /Violinist Kaoru Ishibashi, known as Kishi Bashi, joined the Seattle Symphony Orchestra to participate in a series called "E09066" f improvisation based on the experience of thousands of Japanese Americans imprisoned during World War II, scheduled for January 2021 27th to 29th. HUB New Music String Quartet and Silkroad Ensemble shakuhachi performer Kojiro Umezaki will perform on January 28, 2022. Piano duo HOCKET will perform "(UNTITLED) 2022", a two-part program The second part of the show is dedicated to a promising future emerging from the pandemic. The show includes new works by composers Hitomi Oba and Jonathan Richards, and is scheduled to be released on February 25, 2022. "March 18, 2022" "Ragamala: Hindustan Music Journey" is part of the "Octave 9 Emerging Artists" series curated by the Seattle Symphony Orchestra's composer-resident Reena Esmail and Indian violinist Kala Ramnath perform together. Annually The "Celebrate Asia" series will return on March 20, 2022 and will be conducted by Wang Jiachun. Soloists include Kala Ramnath of Indian violin and Ko-ichiro Yamamoto of trombone. Yamamoto played in the work plan of Yoshio Hosokawa and Tan Dun, This is the joint committee and US premiere of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, as well as the "Violin Concerto" composed by Seattle Symphony Orchestra resident composer Reena Esmail for Kala Ramnath (Kala Ramnath). It is also a joint commission and world premiere by Seattle Symphony. On March 22, 2022, pianist Lang Lang represented his recently recorded Bach "Goldberg Variations" at a concert called "Lang Lang Recital". Dynamic pianist Wang Yujia on April 1, 2022 Performing "Wang Yujia Recital", Japanese pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii will perform "Tsuji Nobuyuki Recital" on April 12, 2022. Musicians of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra perform "Winton Marsalis: Fiddler" Tale Suite" As well as Portland composer Kenji Bunch's "String Circle" and Anton Arensky's "String Quartet No. 2" will perform on May 3, 2022. In related news, the Seattle Symphony Orchestra recently hired viola player Olivia Chew. Recently, she served as a member of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra for six seasons. 206-215-4747 or visit seattlesymphony.org. 

"When We Wake Up" is the proper title for the new season of Arts West 2021-22, with six new stories and six Seattle premieres. The season that started them was "We Fought Monsters Before", this is Justin Huertas' world premiere musical, which will be broadcast from November 26 to December 26, 2021. Loosely adapted from a 16th-century Philippine epic, the youngest sibling in the family. The secret warrior must decide what she must sacrifice to save her family from the monsters and gods that invaded Seattle. Released later this season is "Miku, and the Gods", which is another world premiere of Julia Izumi. An epic adventure, weaving friendship, death, memory, time, rhythm and power in the story of a group of gods, they must travel to the underworld and return. Held from June 16 to July 3, 2022. For more detailed information, please visit Artswest.org.

The Henry Art Museum and the Jack Straw Cultural Center together with Murmurations launched the "Sonolocations-A Sound Works Series". Participants are composers Byron Au Yong (available on June 4, 2021), Chenoa Egawa (available on July 2, 2021), and Bill & Naima Lowe (available on August 8, 2021). All works are available on henryart.org and jackstraw.org as well as soundcloud and other podcasting platforms.

The School of Drama at the University of Washington announced their 2021-2022 public season. Among their choices, they will produce Christopher Chen's "Channel" from May 19th to 29th, 2022. Adrienne McGee will serve as the director. 206-543-5140.

The Fifth Avenue Theater announced the second round of a new music committee for their "First Draft: Boost Your Voice" program. Five writing teams representing BIOC writers have been selected to accept the draft committee. Among the five people, one is the team of Erika Ji, Clare Fuyuko Bierman, and Brandy Hoang Collier. They asked the question in their work titled "Yoko Husband's Killer's Japanese American Wife, Gloria"-"Yoko Ono really disbanded The head band? Is Gloria Abe really responsible for killing John Lennon? If the white husband’s behavior is inevitably blamed on Asian women, should they at least have a say in this matter?" The team has 18 months to complete the first draft. Then in New York City for a week of reading and final speech. For more information, please email [email protected]. The Fifth Avenue Theater and the Country Theater announced the winners of their NW New Music Joint Committee. Three local writing teams will create a new musical based on a photo of their choice. Each show has a one-year development plan, and the photographer will receive a $500 bonus. Rheanna Atendido's "Pabitin" and Stephen Zapantis' photos were one of the selected projects. This is a story of Filipino American grief, gratitude, and growing up in the magical Seattle.

The Pacific Northwest Ballet and PNB School present the following content-During the 2021-2022 season live performance in McCaw Hall, choreographer Robin Mineko Williams will be held from March 18th to 27th, 2022 called "Plot Highlights" World premiere in the show. For complete details, please visit PNB.org/DigitalSubscription or call 206-441-2424 or try www.PNB.org..

The Minnie Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Washington announced that they will begin their 2021-2022 season with live performances on October 13, 2021. Season tickets are now on sale, and one-way tickets will go on sale on September 7, 2021. Some performers include: In the "Chamber Music Series", Wu Han, Philip Sezer and David Finkel will perform at 7:30 PM on Wednesday, February 16, 2022. In the "Piano Series", Conrad Tao will perform at 7:30 PM on Wednesday, October 13, 2021. He will add a newly commissioned original work "TAO" to his show. George Li is a promising young concert pianist who will perform at 7:30 PM on February 18th, 2022. The show includes Chen Qigang's Peking Opera "Moment". Concert pianist Joyce Yang will be on stage at 7:30 PM on May 3, 2022. Order tickets online at MeanyCenter.org or call 206-543-4880.

The freehold theater laboratory/studio, now located in CID, continues to conduct virtual and face-to-face courses in all aspects of the theater. For a list of current courses, please visit freeholdtheatre.org for details or call 206-595-1927. 

Go to Nonsequiter's website and listen to free links to original music performed by local musicians on waywardmusic.org. Carol J. Levin played the electric harp and performed a series of "duo improvisations" with Susie Kozawa, who played various sound objects. Jackie An plays music for violin and electronic devices. Sovan is an environmental music duo composed of songwriter Tomo Nakayama and film composer Jeramy Koepping. Classically trained pianist and designer Tiffany Lin played original piano programs in this series. Susie Kozawa, a local sound artist, has a piece of work she did in the space of the chapel. Percussionist/composer Paul Kikuchi explores new music. Choreographer/dancer/singer Haruko Crow Nishimura performed a new vocal work. Other performers include Leanna Keith, Nordra, Ahmed Yousefbeigi, the mother tongue of Angelina Baldoz, trumpeter Cuong Vu and drummer Ted Poor, the wife/husband classical duo of Melia Watras and Michael Jinsoo Lim, Joshua Limanjaya Lim, Rahikka and James Lee , Kaoru Suzuki and Chris Icaciano have more follow-ups. The church performance space of the Good Shepherd Center has reopened, and now it is booked again for various adventure/experimental music. For more information, please visit waywardmusic.org.

The City Hall also offers digital programming of upcoming events on its live page. They have a media library of hundreds of free videos and audios. New additions include "Social and Personal History of Hyphens" by Pardis Mahdayi and "Stories and Lessons of the U.S. Unknown Environmental Movement" by Audrea Lim. Added a discussion between Senators Mazie K. Hirono and Viet Thanh Nguyen on the memoir "The Story of an Immigrant Daughter". Laila Lalami talks with colleague Viet Thanh Nguyen about "What it means to be an American" and her book "A Conditional Citizen". For more information, please visit townhallseattle.org. 

The University of Washington, Seattle introduced the following content-"Maysoon Zaydi: Survival of the Unadapted". Hear this comedian, writer, and disability advocate talk about diversity. Tuesday, October 26, 2021, at 6:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time). At Meany Performing Arts Center. Try [email protected] to learn more.

Mukai Farm and Garden on Waxiong Island conducted a brand new "maze" self-guided tour at Mukai Farm and Garden this year, opening their Japanese Festival. The festival also includes courses and lectures. For more information, please visit mukaifarmandgarden.org.  

Portland pop band Floating Room is led by lead singer Maya Stoner. Their new album titled "Shina" will be released through Famous Class Records on November 12, 2021. The lead single "Shimancnu" reflects Stoner's Uchinanchu (Okinawa) tradition as she solves the condescension problem she faces every day as an Asian American woman. The Floating Room will be released at The Crocodile in Seattle on November 21, 2021. 

The Food and Beverage Museum showcases the award-winning chef Surbhi Sahni, the founder of TAGMO, who discussed the regional significance of mithal (candy) during Diwali. Online at 7pm (Eastern Time) on October 28, 2021. For more information, please visit mofad.org.

Violinist Jennifer Koh collected short violin compositions from contemporary composers during Covid. The "Alone Together" project is now a digital album on the Cedille label, which includes works from 39 different composers.

"Angel Island Vocal Quartet Oratorio" is the composer Huang Ruo's tribute to the Chinese immigrants who passed through the Bay Area immigration station. Inspired by the poems etched on the walls of that place, Ruo created this musical work. San Francisco’s Helios Quartet and Vocal Ensemble Volti will have their world premiere at the newly renovated Presidio Theater in San Francisco on October 22, 2021 and at Angel Island the next day, weather permitting. This work depicts the journey of an immigrant in three large chorus scenes sung in Mandarin. The premiere will include speeches by immigration law experts, civil rights experts and Chinese-American cultural historians.

Matthew Ozawa conducts Beethoven's "Fedrio" for the San Francisco Opera. Audiences from all over the world can watch the following performances on October 14th, 17th and 20th, 2021 at a price of US$25 per person. Tickets will go on sale on October 5, 2021. Please visit sfopera.com for details.

The British Japan Association aired a program about the musical "Tokyo Rose" produced by Burnt Lemon Theatre. The Japanese wartime disc jockey broadcasted Axis propaganda. The play will tour England in September/October 2021. Musical producer Tanya Aganwal and co-author Maryhee Yoon discussed the inspiration behind this work with Bill Emmott at 6:30 pm (British Summer Time) on October 28, 2021. Free but donations are welcome. Registration is essential. For more information, please visit japansociety.org.uk.

Miho Hazama is a Japanese composer/conductor living in New York. The arrangement of her big band has attracted people's attention at the Big Apple. She has the opportunity to appear in her next film titled "Imaginary Visions" (Edition Records). NS.

Toei Animation together with the Fanthom event will be on November 7th (English dubbing) and November 9th (English subtitles) and "One Piece: A Powerful World" by creator Eiichiro Oda and the first film in the 10 series. Advance tickets on Fanthomeevents.com/OnePiece. Showed in more than 12 theaters in Washington State. 

SIFF Doc Fest will screen a variety of new documentaries covering various fields. It is scheduled to be on the SIFF Egypt from September 30th to October 7th or actually on the SIFF channel. Movies of interest include "Escape," an animated feature film by Jonas Poher Rasmussen about a person's journey as a child refugee in Afghanistan. The 2021 Sundance Film Festival "Documentary" won the World Film Jury Award. "Rescue" is a documentary by E. Chai Vassarhelyi and Jimmy Chin about the dramatic rescue of a men's football team trapped in a flooded cave in 2018. Debbie Lum's "Try Harder" looks at the reality of the U.S. college application process and the interaction of class, race, and educational opportunities. The holiday pass is now on sale. Japanese director Sion Sono ("Suicide Club", "Love Exposure") also screened at SIFF Cinema Egypt on October 9, 10 and 13, 2021. The first English film is titled "Prisoner in the Ghost Land" , Starring Nicolas Cage (Nicolas Cage). As a notorious gangster, he must break the evil curse to rescue the kidnapped girl, otherwise he would risk death. For more information, please visit siff.net.

The "All Monsters" series returns for the 14th year, just in time for Halloween. In this horror movie carnival, two Japanese classic films of this type were screened. "Iron Man, Iron Man" between October 29, 2021 and November 1, 2021 and "Iron Man II: Body Hammer" between October 30 and November 2, 2021 are directed by Masaya Tsukamoto, both All underwent new repairs. The Great Illusion Cinema is located at 1403 NE 50 th St., close to the new university district link train station. [Email protection].

A new 4k restored version of Hayao Miyazaki’s 1879 fantasy animation film "Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro" will be released in SIFF Egypt on October 27, 2021, and then on October 28-29. The SIFF Cinema Center is showing again. Located at the corner of Warren and the Republican Party at the 805 E. Pine and SIFF Film Center near the Seattle Center campus. For more information, please visit siff.net.

The 2021 Social Justice Film Festival is scheduled to be held from October 7 to 17, 2021. For more information, please visit socialjusticefilmfestival.org.

The Seattle Queer Film Festival will be screened from October 14th to 24th, 2021. This will be a hybrid film festival, including virtual shows and live screenings and live events in venues around Seattle. For more information, please visit https://threedollarbillcinema.org/enews or @seattlequeerfilmfestival.

The Tasveer Festival returns to the screenings of films from all over the South Asian diaspora. Held from October 1st to 24th, 2021. Some highlights include actor Riz Ahmed as the holiday keynote speaker and a four-week South Asian women’s comedy seminar, as well as comedy performances by Zubi Ahmed of the Couty Gang. For more information, please visit tasveer.org.

The 40th Vancouver International Film Festival will be held from October 1st to 11th, 2021. There are more than 110 feature films, more than 75 short films, lectures and conferences. Broadcast more than 80% of the show in a safe place in person or on VIFF Connect. Visit viff.org or [email protection] or call 604-683-3456. International examiners will cover this festival in upcoming issues.

 "One Second" is a TV series directed by Zhang Yimou in 2020. It tells a man who escaped from the farm prison during the Cultural Revolution. Although selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 69th Berlin International Film Festival, it was withdrawn shortly before the screening. The official explanation is that "technical difficulties were encountered in the post-production process, but critics suspected it was a politically motivated censorship. The film was originally scheduled to be screened at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival in September. Neon has already won the film US distribution rights.

Filipino film producer Erik Matti's film on corruption and journalism titled "On The Job: The Missing 8" was published in the New York Times about the Venice International Film Festival Mentioned in an article, written by Jessica Kiang.

The latest movie "Blue Bayou" by actor/director Justin Chon tells the story of a Korean adopter who grew up in the bayou town of Louisiana. In order for his family to live a better life, he was forced to face the ghosts of the past after learning that he could be expelled from the only country he once called home. Chon co-directed and starred in this movie with Alicia Vikander, Linh Dan Pham and Vondie Curtis Hall. Screened at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival. Focus Features will be released in theaters on September 17, 2021. Played locally on Regal Thornton Place Imax & Screen X and AMC Seattle 10. In related news, Justin Chon and Kogonada will each direct four episodes of "Pachinko", which is Li Minzhen's best-selling book. This novel records the hopes and dreams of four generations of Korean immigrant families living in Japan. Actors include Lee Min Ho, Jin Ha, Sawai Anna, Kim Misha and Arai Soji. The script was written and executed by Su Xiu for Media Res Productions and will become a multi-part series on Apple TV. It is expected to start shooting in October 2021.

"ROH" directed by Emir Ezwan is Malaysia's best international feature film officially shortlisted for the 2021 Oscars. Cut off from civilization, the life of a young family is overturned by the supernatural phenomenon in this grotesque folktale. The film premiered at Film Movement's Virtual Cinema, VOD and Digital on October 29, 2021. For more information, please visit [E-mail Protection].

"Eternal Race" is the Oscar-winning director Chloe Zhao in the Marvel comics world. The all-star lineup includes Gemma Chen, Salma Hayek, Don Lee, Harris Patel, and Kumei Er Nanjiani, Angelina Jolie, etc. It will be released in theaters on November 5, 2021.

"Escape" is an award-winning feature-length animated feature film that won the Sundance Award. It tells the story of an Afghan who fled the country from his childhood and traveled around the world looking for refuge. It will be released in theaters on December 3, 2021.

"Work harder" is the view of documentary filmmaker Debbie Lum on the fierce competition for students to enter Bay Area high schools. It will be released in theaters on December 3, 2021.

"Driving My Car" is another film by Hamaguchi Ryuzuki, which tells the journey of a stage actor/director, his recently deceased wife, and a mysterious young female driver driving to the theater. A scene where drama meets real life. It will be released in theaters on November 24, 2021.

"The Rescue" is an Oscar-winning ("Free Solo") documentary filmmaker E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin's views on the cave rescue that rescued a boys football team in a cave in Thailand in 2018. In October 2021 Showed in theaters.

"Wheel of Wealth and Fantasy" is a trio of three female characters. These stories depend on accidental coincidences, misunderstandings and unexpected reactions. It will be released in theaters and virtual theaters on October 15, 2021. Directed by Takasuke Hamaguchi.

"Discovery" is a documentary about the journey of three adopted Chinese girls who discovered each other through DNA testing and traveled to their birthplace together. Directed by Amanda Lipitz. It will be released on Netflix on October 20, 2021.

"There's Someone in Your House" starring Sydney Park, as a teenager transplanted from Hawaii to Nebraska. He unveils the murderer with his friends. It will be released on Netflix in October 2021.

"Memoirs" is a film made by Thai film producer Apichatpong Weerasethakul in 2021. It plays Tilda Swinton as a British expatriate in Colombia who is ill from a respiratory illness. One night, she was awakened from her sleep by a strange impact sound that no one else seemed to hear. It was released in the United States by NEON, and NEON started a theater distribution plan that will be shown in one theater at a time for several weeks.

"Broadcast Signal Invasion" plays Harry Shun Jr. as an archivist, trying to find the people behind some disturbing pirate broadcasts. Directed by Jacob Gentry. It will be released in theaters and on-demand on October 22, 2021.

"They say nothing is the same" is the film debut of director Odagiri Joe, who is an actor. This is the story of a ferryman whose work is being replaced by the construction of a bridge. The background is set at the turn of the century, starring Jiang Benming. Photography by Christopher Doyle. It will be released on November 12, 2021 and will be released on demand.

MUBI presents the following content-Lynne Sachs' 2013 documentary "Your Day is My Night" is a film directed by a director depicting the lives of Chinese immigrants in the United States. Jia Zhangke's 2020 movie "Swimming to the Sea and Turning Blue" is a documentary meditation about his hometown. It records China's rapid transformation with the carrier of oral history, turning personal memoirs and literature into a story of a nation. Park Chan-ok's 2009 film "Paju" focuses on how South Korea has changed in the face of gentrification and how mistakes and repressed memories are reflected in the repeated images of demolished houses. "Unheard Voice: Mr. Mori Retrospective" continues the 1973 film "Guerrilla Fighter" in which one of the revolutionary activists felt turbulent about his political path as he traveled through the city of Calcutta, which was on the brink of change. "The truth or consequence: a documentary by Hannah Jayanti, set in a desert town in New Mexico. It follows five residents in the shadow of one of the world’s first commercial spaceports Live their lives. Iwai Shunji's 2001 film "Everything About Lily Weeks" is a sad tribute to the fanaticism and friendship between young people at the beginning of the Internet age. "Pan God" is a Filipino film producer Raf. Lav Diaz's 2020 film, which was screened at the Venice Film Festival last year. This is a psychological thriller that focuses on the rise of humanity and fascism and the trauma of a country. Go to [email Protect] to learn about this movie streaming service, where you can rent these movies.

"Koshien: Japan's Dream Land" is a documentary about Japanese high school baseball and surrounding culture. Director Ema Ryan Yamazaki followed two coaches to lead their team to participate in the national championship with different concepts and analyzed their coaching methods. Stream on Criterion or rent on Amazon Prime Video. 

Cary Fukunaga is the director of the Spanish-language crime drama "Sin Nombre", which is adapted from the 2011 "Jane Eyre" and HBO's "True Detective" and Netflix's "Beasts Without Borders" Emmy Award-winning works, but he is the most The eye-catching place was when MGM released the long-delayed Daniel Craig final James Bond film No Time to Die on October 8, 2021. Die), may come.

Kurosawa's latest movie "The Spy's Wife" was screened for a short weekend at the Northwest Film Forum in the first week of October. This is a Hitchcock-style thriller about Japanese couples spying in China when World War II broke out. Streaming started on October 15th and distributed by Kino Lorber.

Tamil film producer Mari Selvaraji's "Karnan" looks at the quirky, grumpy anti-heroes of the southern Indian countryside when he discovers that the village’s elders are being tortured by the police At that time, he took over the country. The star Danush is the protagonist. Stream on Amazon Prime Video.

NFFTY will hold the first National Youth Film Producers Summit from October 4 to November 6, 2021. This is a free virtual resource that supports a 5-week meeting between emerging filmmakers and industry professionals, ending with the Film Career Day in 2021. Co-produced Seattle with New York City. For more information, please visit nffty.org.

Written and spoken art

Hugo House, a writing center in Seattle, plans to open new live and virtual courses in the fall. Some possibilities include the following-Aimee Suzara started a course called "Poetry from Asian American Identity and Race" starting on November 16, 2021. Shankar Narayan offers these courses. "I drank your poisonous nectar: ​​writing with the goddess of Indian mythology" started on September 30, 2021. "Techwashed!" Writing with AI, Data and Surveillance" started on October 9, 2021. Anne Liu Kellor's subject is "Discover Your Story: Writing Creative Nonfiction Novels for Women of Color". Classes will start on October 13, 2021. Brian Dang has a few classes for theater lovers. "Bake-Off: Start and stage a play in 4 weeks" on October 19, 2021 and October 30, 2021 "Party Talk: Dialogue for Generations". Want to know more about these courses and other courses? For more information, please try [email protection] or call 206-322-7030. If you need to confirm your course To make a reservation, please email Lily at [email protected]. Iranian-American poet Kaveh Akbar will read his latest book "The Bell of Pilgrimage" at 7:30 on Friday, October 15, 2021 (Pacific Standard Time) at the Lapis Theatre. Graywolf Press). Go to https/lectures.secure.force.com/ticket/#/events/0S5600000IjWORUA3 to register. The Hugo House is located on Capitol Hill in Seattle at 1634 – 11th Ave.

The University Bookstore has the following virtual event-Author Qian Julie Wang talks with Dr. Connie So about her memoir "The Beautiful Country" at 6 pm (Pacific Time) on October 6, 2021 (Wednesday). This is an important American story about a Chinese immigrant girl who grew up in New York City. The University Bookstore and Microsoft Alumni Network showcased Shirish Nadkarni and Gowri Shankar talking about his book "From Entrepreneurship to Exit-An Insider Guide to Starting and Expanding Your Technology Business". On Thursday, October 21, 2021, at 6 pm (Pacific Time), University of Washington professor Dr. Anu Taranath and "Behond Guilt Trips: Mindful travel in an Unequal World" discussed her book with fellow author Reagan Jackson. UBS collaborated with Third Place Books to launch Chinese popular science fiction writer Liu Cixin at 7pm (Pacific Time) on Monday, November 1st. He read his latest book "The Wandering Earth". In this case, the book you booked is your ticket. If you receive this book by 12 PM (Pacific Time) on Friday, October 29, you will receive a link to the event via email on the same day. After that, the customer will receive an email containing their digital access rights.

The third book showcases these virtual readings-at 6 pm on Friday, October 8, Janice, the founder of Entropy and the author of the novel "Imagine a Death" (Texas A & M Press) Lee read with Jennifer Calkins, the author of "The Fugitive" (PT). Gene Kwak discussed his debut work "Overlook" on October 20, 2021 (Pacific Time), about a brainwashed professional wrestler and fellow writer Catherine Lacey in search of an alienated father s story.  

The Jackstraw Cultural Center showcased "Sound Adventures", which included conversations and readings with current Jack Straw writers. Authors include Troy Osaki, Ching-In Chen, Ebo Barton, etc. Visit jackstraw.org/blog or try iTunes to listen to these readings.

Elliott Bay Book Company offers a series of activities in their virtual reading series. Here are some. Two local poets read together in virtual reading on Sunday, October 3, 2021 at 2 pm (PDT). Shin Yu Pai, who was recently appointed as the curator of the Seattle City Hall project, read the 2020 "Enso" (Entre rios) series and her latest series "Virgo" (empty bowl. Ann Spiers) A beloved Vazon Island poet, she also published two new books. She read "Rain Violent" (Empty Bowl) and "Back Cut" (Black Heron Press). Go to https://www.evenbrite. com/e/shin-yu-pai-virga-enso-and-ann -spiers-rain-violent-back-cut-tickets-170089980711. Montreal novelist Kim Thuy discussed her latest book: EM" (Seven Stories Publishing House), translated from French by Sheila Fischman and Vietnamese poet/novel Nguyen Pan Que Mai October 5, 2021 at 6 pm (Pacific Daylight Time). Go to httpas://www.eventbrite.com/e/kim /thuy-reads-from-and-discusses-em-tickets-170094564421. The novel writer Amitava Kumar made a virtual one on Wednesday, October 6, 2021 at 6 pm (Pacific Daylight Time) with Lidy, who is also a novelist. Lydia Millet talks about his new book "Time Beyond This Time (Knopf)". Go to https://www.eventbrite.com/e/amtava-kumar-author-of-a-time -o utside-this-time-with-lydia-millet-tickets-170502798460. Two Portland writers jointly read their new book virtually. Teresa K. Miller reads "Borderline Fortune" (Penguin), Janice Lee reads "Imagine a Death" (Texas Review Press). It is scheduled for Thursday, October 7th at 6pm (PDT) and will be hosted virtual by EBBC. To register for this, please visit https://www.evenbrite.com/e/teresa -k-miller-borderline:fortune-and-janice-lee-imagine-a-death-tickets-179594298948. Fowzia Karimi Speaking of her book "The Milky Way Above Us (Deep Kraft Paper)", it tells about the war and exile in Afghanistan and how it affects generations of a family. Contributing to the dialogue are Richcki Ducornet and Micheline Aharonian Marcom. Friday, October 8 at 5 pm (Pacific Daylight Time). To register for this event, please visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/fowzia-karumi-above-us-the-milky-way-book-event-tickets-170783226227. Brothers and sisters Andy Chou Musser and Amy Seto Forrester introduced a new children's book called "Home under the Stars" (Little Bigfoot). Both grew up in a mixed family in Oregon, where they were educated at home. To register for this reading collection on Saturday, October 9, 2021 at 2 pm (Pacific Daylight Time), please visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/andy-chou-musser-a-home-under-the- stars-with -amy-seto-forrester-tckets-167524996775. Poet Victoria Chang and fellow poet Rick Barot talk about her new prose "Dear Memories: Letters About Writing, Silence, and Sadness" (Milkweed). Friday, October 15 at 6 pm (Pacific Daylight Time). Virtually hosted by EBBC. To register, please visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/poet-victoria-chang-author-of-dear-memory-with-rick-barot-tickets-172382981137. Bellingham's poet Jane Wong read her new book "How Not to Be Afraid of Everything" (Alice James Books) and shared this space with other poets, Anastacia-Renee and Chen Chen. Saturday, October 16, 2021 at 6 pm (Pacific Daylight Time). To register, please visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/16728419011. Vietnam Peace Tree welcomes best-selling author Nguyen Phan Kwe Mai as the keynote speaker for its 26th anniversary celebration. Mai is the author of "Song of the Mountains" (Algonquin), a multi-generational novel that tells the story of a family based on the Vietnam War. Peace Trees Vietnam is a non-profit organization dedicated to removing explosives from war-torn land and resuming production. To register for this virtual event, please visit https://www.peacttreesvietnam.org/new.../event-calendar.html. To book a virtual event, please visit elliottbaybook.com and click on the "Events" page or call 206-624-6600 or call toll-free 1-800-962-5311. Although all current activities are virtual, the bookstore is open.

This fall, 2021 Jack Straw Writers will be reading in multiple locations in the area. They include the following content – ​​Reading series on time at 6 pm on Thursday, October 14, 2021. Requires ZOOM registration. Thursday, October 21, 2021, 7pm, Hugo House. It will be held at the Seattle Public Library hosted by EJ Koh at 4 pm on Saturday, November 6, 2021. For more information, please visit [E-mail Protection].

Seattle Art and Lectures has announced their schedule for the 2021/22 season. All single tickets and subscriptions are now on sale. Go to [Email Protection] or call 206-621-2230. Our readers may be interested in the following – Cathy Park Hong and Ijeoma Oluo's dialogue: face-to-face and online. Friday, January 28, 2022 at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time). Langston Hughes Academy of Performing Arts. Ed Yong is The Atlantic Pulitzer Prize winner, science journalist, and guest writer, and the author of "I have a lot of people". He will deliver a speech on Thursday, February 10, 2022 at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time) . At Seattle City Hall. Charles Yu, author of the award-winning novel "Indoor Chinatown", will deliver a speech at Benaroya Hall – S. Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium on Tuesday, February 15, 2022 at 7:30 pm (Pacific Standard Time). Writer Mira Jacobs appears in person and online at Seattle City Hall at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time) on Tuesday, March 8, 2022. Jacob is the author of the graphic memoir "Good Words: Memoirs in Conversation". Korean feminist poet and famous translator Don Mee Choi talks with Stefania Heim at 7:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time) on Thursday, April 17, 2022. Lapis Lazuli Theater at Hugo House. Choi is the author of "Hardly War" and "DMZ Colony" on WAVE Books.

The Washington College of Humanities has published their roster of speakers' bureaus from 2021 to 2023, with speeches ranging from individuals to the world. The public speaking is free and will start on July 1, 2021. Some speakers included the following-under "Art and Literature", Deepti Agrawal will give a lecture on "The Ancient Art of Madhubani Painting". Under "History", Julie Fan made a speech on "Hidden History: The South Vietnamese Side of the Vietnam War". Under the "Life and Culture" column, Tsugawa Hyeri introduced "Samurai Code: How Bushido Changed Life". Under "Race and Identity", Michelie Liu talked about "Laughing Points: Asian Americans, Comedy and Inclusiveness". The King County Library System will showcase "Jokes: Asian Americans, Comedy, and Inclusiveness" at 2 pm on September 18, 2021. To book an online virtual program, please contact [email protection]. For more information, please try [email protection]

EAST WIND BOOKS in Berkeley, California remains one of the most comprehensive Asian American and Asian bookstores in the country. They sponsor the following free virtual events. East Wind Books will present "Writing AAPI Heroes" by comic artists Gene Luen Yang and Pornsak Pichetshote at OACC at 3 pm on October 9, 2021. (Need vaccine and mask). The event will also be broadcast live. Reply on aapicomicsonline.eventbrite.com. "The China Issue: The Gold Rush and Global Politics" is a book about Chinese immigration to gold mining areas in California, Australia, and South Africa. Author/historian Mae Ngai will discuss the book with Harvey Dong, Christopher Tomlins, and Lok Siu at the Zoom webinar on Friday, November 19, 2021 at 1:00 PM (Pacific Daylight Time). This is a rescheduled date. Register at crg.berkeley.edu/events. To get more detailed information about these events, please email [email protected] or visit asiabookcenter.com.  

Darren Byler, author of "In the Camp-China's High-Tech Exile" (Columbia Global Report) appeared on Sunday, October 10 at 10 am and 1 pm (Eastern Time) CNN’s "Fareed Zakaria GPS" program. Also at 6 pm (Eastern Time) on October 19th, Byler will have a conversation with Dr. Andrew J. Nathan in a virtual event on the subject of "freedom that disappears in the hands of technology in China and other regions". To register, visit evetns.columbia.edu.

The Korean Association of New York has the following author talks. Woomin Kim will read it at 5 pm on October 12, 2021, and Keun Suk Gendry-Kim will read it at 5 pm on October 21, 2021. Sang Yong Park will read at 5 pm on November 9th, and Jehea Kim will read at 6 pm on December 7th. All times are East Coast time. 350 Madison is on the 24th floor. New York City, New York. 212-759-7525 or try koreasociety.org.

"Good Asians" is a comic series about the real life in San Francisco's Chinatown before the war, starring a Chinese-American detective. Written by Pornsak Paichetshote and illustrated by Alexandre Tefenkgi. For more information, please try [email protected].

"Yellow Tone" (OCA Greater Seattle Area Asia-Pacific Advocate) is a comic novella produced by University of Washington students in the class taught by Connie So. Created to commemorate the gold medal winners of the Chinese, Japanese and Filipino American Congresses. Students Cyman Wong and Collette Chang found an old box containing World War II letters, photos, and souvenirs while studying classwork. This became a movie project that was discontinued during Covid 19. Instead, the students turned the material into a book about the Japanese invasion of China, the detention of Japanese Americans, the end of World War II, and the International District of Seattle's Chinatown.

The long list of the 2021 National Book Awards has been announced. Some of the Asian Americans and Asians on the list include the following-the new book title of the Penguin Young Readers Group was selected for the long list of young literature at the National Book Awards in 2021. These include Malinda Luo's "Last Night in the Telegraph Club" and Sheng Yinke's "Legend of Aunt Bao". Elisha Shua Dusapin's "Winter in Sokcho" (open letter), translated by Aneesa Abbas Higgins, Go Fei's Peach Blossom Paradise (New York Book Review), translated by Canaan Moore, "Origin of Species and Other Stories" by Bo-Young Kim (by Joungmin Lee Both Comfort and Sora Kim-Russell’s Kaya Press, translated by Sora Kim-Russell, were nominated for the 2021 National Book Award or translated literature. Wang Jie’s "Sunflower Casting" (Night Boat Book) and Ruan Hua’s "A Thousand Times You Lost Your Treasure" ( Wave Books) are shortlisted for the National Poetry Book Awards. In the "Fiction" category, Katie Kitamura's "Intimacy" (Riverhead Books) has been nominated. In the "Non-fiction" category , Grace M. Cho’s "Tastes Like War: A Memoir" (feminist publishing house) was nominated. In the "" category, Paula Yoo's "From Whisper to Rally Scream: Vincent Chin was killed and inspired the Asian American movement" The Trial" (Norton Young Readers) has been nominated. The finalists will be announced on October 5, 2021.

The winners and finalists of the Washington Book Awards have been announced. EJ Koh's "The Magical Language of Others" won the category of "Biography and Memoirs". Donna Miscolta's "Living Color: Angie Rubio Stories" was shortlisted for the "Fiction" finals, and Don Mee Choi's "DMZ Colony" was shortlisted for the "Poetry" finals. Congratulations to Choi for receiving the "Genius" funding from the "Demilitarized Zone Colony" of the MacArthur Foundation.

The University of Washington Press is looking for writers to write manuscripts or new book proposals. The editors of UW Press are eager to contact current and potential authors about new projects and book proposals. Contact them via email and schedule a meeting via phone or Zoom. The executive editor is Lorri Hagman of [email protected].

The following is a partial list of Asian American or Asian American new books and Asian new books. If you are interested in viewing any of them, please let us know——

"Almost an American Girl" (Balzer Bray) is a graphic novel by Robin Ha. This is a powerful memoir. It tells the story of an uprooted Korean kid who suddenly found herself sent to a new school in the southern hinterland, and how she began to adapt and adapt to such a new environment.

Sean Cho A.'s "House of America" ​​(Fall House Press) won the 2020 Fall House Chapter Book Award. These poems reflect a keen eye for daily events and how these small events shape us personally.

"I Love Boba" (Lychee Press), created by Katrina Liu and illustrated by Phidit Prayoga, is a wonderful ode to the delicious bubble tea that originated in Taiwan and has become an international sensation.

"Safflower-Tsugami Yoshiharu Complete Works Vol. 2" (Picture Book Quarterly), Tsugami Yoshiharu. Asakawa Mitsuhiro's series of editing and essays. Co-editor, translation and co-author of the paper, Ryan Holmberg. The book ranges from in-depth character studies to personal reflections to ensemble comedies set in Japanese country hotels and bathhouses. This is a world full of extreme poverty, traditions, secret fisheries and high-priced koi farming. "Safflower" affirmed why Zinge became one of the most important manga artists in Japan.

"I, the accused witness-my story of injustice" (Norton), written by Adama Bah. Bah's family immigrated from Guinea to New York City when she was two years old and grew up. She has a deep connection with her community and there has never been a reason to question her identity. But in the shadow of 9/11, as a Muslim, she began to suffer hatred, racism and prejudice because of her clothes, skin color and religious beliefs. In this memoir, a young writer opens a window for young readers to understand the discrimination faced by American Muslims in the United States and after 9/11.

"Genghis Khan on the Drum" (Omnidawn), poem by John Yau. The famous art writer and poet used Genghis Khan’s another self-return in his latest book, using sharp humor and witty topics at the time, clichés about the Chinese, the language of philosophers, and the remnants of racism and popular culture. The thing attacked.

"The Transformation of Painting Myanmar" (Hong Kong University Press), edited by Ian Holliday and Aung Kaung Myat. After a long period of military dictatorship, before the army reappeared to shut it down completely, a vibrant art scene emerged during the transition period. This book uses the names and faces of more than 80 contemporary artists to reveal the life experiences and citizens' desire for the future in Myanmar during the reform era.

"The Far Place" (Columbia University Press), written by Taiwanese novelist Luo Yiqin, translated by Jeremy Tian. A Taiwanese man found himself trapped in mainland China while trying to take his unconscious father home. While dealing with relatives he hardly knew, he found himself in a long struggle with the regulations of the Byzantine hospital. A book that examines the rift between Taiwan and China from the most personal level.

"Manifest Technique – Hip Hop, Empire, and Visionary Filipino American Culture" (University of Illinois), Mark R. Villegas. Since the early days of hip-hop culture, Filipino-Americans have been innovators and collaborators of hip-hop culture. However, despite some success, the importance of this type in the Filipino-American community is often overlooked. The author considers hip-hop scenes from coast to coast, revealing how Filipino Americans use music, dance, and visual arts to create their world.

How tall are we in the dark" (Morrow), Sequoia Long Pine. This debut story tells a series of intricate characters over hundreds of years as humans struggle to rebuild themselves after the climate plague.

"The Shape of Home" (Levine Querido Books) written and illustrated by Rashin Kheiriyeh. On Rashin's first day of school in the United States, everything was different from what she used to be. The children's families come from all over the world. Open this book and discover with Rashin and her classmates the real things that shape a place called home.

"A Beautiful Country" (Shuangri) is Wang Qianjulei's memoir. It allows readers to become undocumented children of poor children living in the richest countries in the world. In China, Qian’s parents are professors; in the United States, her family is “illegal”, which requires all the determination and little happiness they can gather to survive.

"This Emerald World" (University of Nebraska Press) by Thai-American poet and author Ira Sukrungruang records a year of misfortune, exploration, experimentation, self-discovery, and ultimate healing. It questions the nature of love and heartbreak and reveals the fragility of human beings.

"A Thousand Questions" (Quill Tree Books) by Saadia Faruqi. Mimi is not excited about spending summer vacation with her grandparents she has never met in Karachi, Pakistan. On the other side of town, Sakina has not told her parents that all she needs to be admitted to the school is to improve her English test scores. When the girls met, they thought they were too different to be friends. But the environment pushes them towards friendship, in which they realize that they can help each other, including their kind heart, big dreams and all the right questions. A book that celebrates the power of courage and friendship.

Sarah E. Thompson's "Prince Genji and Parody" (MFA Boston) focuses on how artists interpret the conspiracy and love story of The Tale of Genji, one of the oldest novels in the world, and serves as an exhibition catalog.

"My Love for You Forever" (Philomel) was drawn by Gillian Sze and Michelle Lee. "What is love? A child wants to know. When his mother prepared a traditional Chinese meal for him, she answered his question because the artwork has fantastically enhanced each image.

"Personal Attention Role Playing" (Metonym Press)-The story of Helen Chau Bradley. A young gymnast struggles with an overworked mother while having a crush on an older and more talented teammate. A new queer in his 20s deals with two kinds of intimacy. An interdependent list author became addicted to the ASMR channel in Japan. The queer metal band’s summer tour began in the hot summer. These stories portray the awkward interaction and isolation between generations, communities, and cultures.

"Skinship" (Knopf) is Yoon Choi's novel debut, centered on a group of Korean-American families. A married couple is forced to face a friend's painful past. A woman in an arranged marriage struggles to establish contact with a son she has concealed from her husband for years. A kind sister unknowingly reunited the abuser with the victim. "Skinship" is a scorching look at the intimacy that fails to show us who we truly love.

James Hammatson's "suspend" (tomorrow). This is a social horror novel that revolves around brutal killings in a full-contact haunted escape room—a provocative exploration of capitalism, hate politics, racial fetishism, and our obsession with fear as entertainment.

Translated by R. Orion Martin from Ma Zuo's "Night Bus" (Drawn & Quaterly). In this new graphic novel, a Chinese underground cartoonist travels through the countryside in this magical realist debut. Ride on an adventurous late-night bus with a young woman wearing round-frame glasses, making detours in more and more fantastic scenery. At the same time, a young cartoonist returned home after graduating from art school, and while taking care of his elderly grandmother whose memory was declining, he worked hard to become a working artist.

Sabina Murray's "Human Zoo" (Grove Press). Filipino-American Christina "Ting" Klein left New York to escape a terrible divorce and arrived in Manila to study the biographies of indigenous Filipinos who were brought to the United States at the turn of the century and exhibited at the International Exposition as part of the Human Zoo. She stays with aristocratic relatives while the country lies paralyzed under the power of a newly-elected despot. Her best friend is a gay socialist professor, and her ex-boyfriend may be connected to a corrupt government, and then she is responsible for These islands were introduced to the cousin’s fiance in order to find his roots on the task. The plot of this story is enough to write six novels. A storyteller at the pinnacle of power.

"SWAN DIVE-The Making of a Rogue Ballerina" (Holt), Georgina Pazcoguin. Pazcoguin was born in a small town in Pennsylvania of Filipino/Italian descent and came to the American Ballet School in New York. Within ten years of becoming a professional ballerina, she will become the first Asian American female solo dancer in NYCB. In this memoir, she exposes the life of ballet dancers in this world of survival of the fittest, telling about the highs, lows, and the legacy of sexual harassment, mental abuse, and racism.

"Pure Invention-How Japan Created the Modern World" (Crown), by Matt Alter. Japan is the birthplace of world fantasy: karaoke and Walkman, manga and anime, Pac-Man, online image boards and emoticons. But in this book, a Japanese media reporter proved in his investigation that these novelties are not only entertaining, but also pave the way for our confusing modern life.

"Arsenic and Adobo-The Mystery of Tita Rossi's Kitchen" (Berkeley), by Mia P. Manansala. When Lila Macapagal moved home to recover from the terrible breakup, her mission was to rescue her Tita Rossi's collapsed restaurant. Dealing with a group of blind aunts is an annoying thing, but when an annoying food critic (and an ex-boyfriend) dies in a restaurant, the pursuit of romance takes a back seat in solving the murder case .

Anna Qu's "Made in China-Memoirs of Love and Labor" (Catapult) is a story about discipline as a form of dedication. A young girl was forced by her mother to work in a sweatshop in Queens. The girl did not acquiesce, but referred to her mother as the Office of Children and Family Services. The consequences of this behavior will affect the rest of her life and her relationship with her mother. This powerful work traces a Chinese immigrant's journey to the future of the United States.

Shruli Swarmy's "Archer" (Algonquin) delves into a woman's obsession with Indian dance and the complicated relationship between her and her mother over the years.

Edited by Sung Yung Shin, "What Are We Hungry-Refugee and Immigrant Stories about Food and Families" (Minnesota Historical Society Press) looks at the diverse cultures that make up families in the state and the importance of food in their lives. Fourteen different writers wrote about their complex, bitter, fun, difficult, happy and lasting relationship with food, cooking and eating.

"ABC Of Feelings" (Philomel) written and illustrated by Bonnie Lui. This picture book is a journey through the alphabet, showing children that it is perfectly possible to feel many different things, sometimes all at the same time. Perfect reading aloud, suitable for children to learn all about feelings and their ABCs.

"I'm Not Spark" (DC Youth Graphic Novel) combines the story of New York Times best-selling author Tamaki Mariko with Yoshitoni's artwork. Seventeen-year-old Mandy is completely different from her mother Xinghuo. Her mother is beautiful, tall, shining, and a superhero. Mandy is incapable, is a child who dyes his hair black and hates almost everyone. But when someone from Starfire's past arrived, daughter Mandy had to make a choice. She can give up before the battle begins, or she can step into the unknown world and save her mother desperately.

"Grandpa Across the Ocean" (Abrams) written and illustrated by Hyewon Yum. When a little boy visited his grandfather in Korea, the language and customs seemed strange, and his grandfather's house was the most boring place on earth. But when he adjusted to these differences, he began to appreciate and enjoy his grandfather. A book shared the challenges and fun of having distant relatives.

"Honor" (Algonquin) is a novel by Thrity Umrigar that tells the story of two Indian women and their courage to inspire each other. One is a privileged American citizen, and the other lives in India. Marriage between Hindus and Muslim man is a shame.

"How Do You Live?" by Gensaburo Yoshino "Was first published in 1937. "Algonquin" has always been considered a crossover classic for young readers in Japan, and it is also the favorite of Oscar-winning animation director Hayao Miyazaki. His last film will be based on this book. The foreword was written by Neil Gaiman and translated by Bruno Navasky. The story tells the story of a young boy who lost his father at the age of 15, and the important life issues he received from his uncle Diary.

"Faultlines" (Customs House) by Emily Itani. A bittersweet love story of a bittersweet Japanese housewife who has to make choices and a sharp portrayal of female identity.

"Outside Voice, Please" (Cleveland University Press) is a new collection of poems by Valerie Hsiung, which will be published on October 5, 2021. Compressed and expanded to produce a long sequence of poems, reminiscent of Myung Mi Kim's sound terrain and CD Wright's documentary poetics. "-Diana Coy Nguyen

"Heaven" by Mieko Kawamiko (European version). The author from the best-selling book "Breasts and Eggs" has made an amazing exploration of the daily life of Japanese professional women, telling a new story about the experience of a teenage boy being tortured by his classmates. It explores the meaning and experience of violence and the comfort of friendship. Translated from Japanese by Sam Bett and David Boyd.

"Lala's Words" (Orchard) by Gracey Zhang. The author/illustrator’s energetic images and sad words convey a message of love and kindness, as it tells the story of a young girl and her generous spirit of caring for the plants near her.

"Issei Baseball – The Story of First Japanese Ballplayers" (University of Nebraska), Robert K. Fitts. This book tells the story of Japanese baseball pioneers and young people who came to the United States to start a new life, but found paranoia and discrimination.

"My Tree" (Neal Porter Books/Holiday House), Hope Lim is painted by Il Sung Na. A young boy who had just arrived here from South Korea found solace in the plum trees in his American backyard, which reminded him of the persimmon trees in his family’s home. As the seasons changed, he looked at the trees outside and followed all stages of his life. But one day, a storm knocked the tree down.

"In the concentration camp-China's high-tech exile" (Columbia Global Report), Darren Byler. In the past ten years, a cruel and high-tech colonization is taking place in Xinjiang, China’s vast northwestern region, where as many as one and a half million Uighurs, Kazakhs, and Huis have disappeared in heavily guarded camps and related factories. This is the largest detention of religious minorities since World War II. Darren Byler, one of the world's leading experts in Uyghur society and Chinese surveillance, used a decade of research to tell this story.

"Alma Presses Play" by Tina Cane (Make Me the World). Alma is a half-Chinese, half-Jewish girl who has used her Walkman to make changes most of the time. Friends moved away, love came and went, and her parents divorced. In this confusing world at the beginning, middle, and end, is Alma ready to play the original soundtrack of her life?

The "Prisoner" (Verso) of Hwang Sok-Yong. In this honest memoir, the famous Korean political novelist sets his sights on himself and his life, as well as the present and future of Korea. Once imprisoned by the government, he demanded more than a full commitment to freedom, justice, and the moral universe.

Rajani LaRocca's "Where Sanyo Meets" (Abrams), illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan. This picture book tells the sweet stories of mothers, daughters and grandmothers traveling to the southern tip of India together, as well as the sweet stories of the friends they visited, the meals they shared, and the old friends they met.

"The Adventures of Team Pom-Squid Happened" by Isabel Roxas (Flying Eyes). Friends set up their own synchronized swimming club in Queens, New York, but stumbled upon a lonely creature who lives secretly in their swimming pool in the form of a graphic novel in this young adult adventure/mystery story.

"Josephine Rout’s Japanese costume details (The Thames and Hudson/Victoria and Albert Museum) is a catalog of exhibitions held in the UK in 2020. It brings together more than 100 costumes, revealing the intricacies of Japanese costumes from the 18th century to the present, Including women's, men's and children's clothing. The details are chosen because of their exquisite beauty and craftsmanship and their understanding of the identity of the wearer. 

The story and art of Priya Huq's "Bit by Bit—The Story of Nisrin's Turban" (amulet). When 13-year-old Nisrin was viciously attacked for wearing a headscarf as part of Bangladesh's cultural costumes in a school project, her family did their best to help her recover before the start of high school. But when Nisrin suddenly decided to listen to her jhijab every day, her family was shocked and terrified. What happens next will challenge her will and her decision to retract the symbol that made her the target in the first place.

"Violet" (Feminist Press) was written by Kyung-Sook Shin and translated by Anton Hur. This novel by Shin, winner of the Mann Asian Literature Prize tells the story of a neglected young woman who has experienced violence and isolation in contemporary Korean society.

"Yellow Rain" by Mai Der Vang (Grey Wolf Press). In this documentary, poems, and collages, an American Hmong poet reinvestigates the biochemical weapons that the U.S. has thrown on the Hmong people after the Vietnam War.

"Watercress" (Neal Porter Books/Holiday House) by Andrea Wang, illustrated by Jason Chin. As her family drove through the countryside, a young girl and her brother had to go out to help when their parents discovered a vegetable they had known since childhood. Picking watercress by the side of the road, the girl was embarrassed and wondered why her family could not buy groceries in the store like others. But when the mother shared the story of the family's life in China, the girls learned to appreciate the food they forage.

"O Beautiful" (St. Martins) by Jung Yun ("Sanctuary"). When her graduate mentor provided a former model in her forties, she worked hard to reinvent herself as a freelance writer and had the opportunity to write an article about North Dakota’s oil boom for a famous magazine. This gave our protagonist the opportunity to reproduce Visit her hometown. This woman was born to a domineering white father and a distant Korean mother. She returned to a landscape she hardly knew. When her past is intertwined with what she reports, it reveals new realities that will forever change her life and the way she sees the world.

"Amira's Picture Day" (vacation house) by Reem Faruqi, illustration by Fahmida Azim. A young girl who likes to celebrate but feels conflicted because the photo shoot of her school class took place on the same day saw the Muslim Happy Eid and was sensitive.

Thirii Myo Kyaw Myint's "The Name of Light-Family History" (Graywolf Publishing) won the Graywolf Publishing Award for non-fiction novels. Born in Myanmar and raised in Bangkok and San Jose, Myint in this memoir tells a moving chronicle of colonialism and heritage. This book travels through time and memory, measuring the history of three generations of a family against the painful background of post-colonial violence and racism.

"Goodnight Ganesha" (Philomel) by Nadia Salomon, illustration by Poonam Mistry. When night fell in the city, two children who went to India to visit their grandparents found a lot of fun there.

The "Snake Sisters" (Harper Teen) of Sarena and Sasha Nanua. The story of how two lives collide, turning everything upside down. Princess Rani is feared by the people, but her father does not believe that she has the ability to rule. Ria is a cunning thief, facing the threat of being called up to participate in the imminent war. Now that the two women look exactly the same, how will they join hands, exchange positions, and save the kingdom? Fantasy novels for teenagers.

"Colorful" (counterpoint) by Eto Mori. Translated from Japanese by Jocelyne Allen. This novel popular in Japan finally found its way to the United States in this English translation. A young adult story about death, mental health, and what real life means. Things get complicated when an invisible soul has a second chance to return to Earth and live in the body of a fourteen-year-old boy who has just committed suicide.

Now, it is becoming more and more common for foreign players to break into the American professional baseball world, but Robert K. Fitts' "MASHI – The Unfulfilled Baseball Dream of the First Japanese Major League Player Masanori Murakami" ( Nebraska) takes us back to 1964 and tells the story of Japan’s first major league player in the United States. The story of the pioneers of baseball.

"Alchemy-get ready, pack, go!" (Harper) written and illustrated by Ruth Chan (fascinating, I might add). Most children have difficulty deciding what to pack and how to pack when they start traveling. When you consider your next trip, let the alpaca with extraordinary packaging skills be your guide. 

Ruth Ozeki ("Temporary Story")'s "Book of Form and Void" (Viking) is the latest novel by this northwestern writer. A teenage boy began to hear everything after his father died. When he took refuge in the library, the voice followed him, where he discovered a strange new world. When he met his own talk book, his life began to change. On sale on September 21, 2021.

Sharon Hashimoto's "More American" (Off the Grid Press). The title of Seattle poet and fiction writer won the 2021 Off-Grid Poetry Award. In this book, she evokes the voices of grandparents, children, soldiers, and survivors from collective memory to convey the realities of assimilation, service, and detention that Japanese Americans experienced during World War II and decades afterward . Fully public, the artwork decorating the cover is mine.

S. Qiouyi Lu's "In the Watching City" Tor Dot Com). Anima is a super-sensory human being responsible for monitoring and protecting cities. But what happens when a mysterious outsider comes to this world with curiosity from all over the world? A multifaceted story about borders, power, diaspora and transformation.

"Viking Graphic" is the follow-up graphic novel of Ying Viking's "Secret City". In this sequel, our child heroes Hannah and Ever live in peace with the Morgan family until Mr. Morgan is kidnapped. The children quarrel with the street magician, but if the mystery of the disappearance is solved, the two must learn to cooperate.

"Silent Parade-Galileo Detective Novel" (Minotaur), Keio Higashino. The author’s favorite character, Detective Galileo, in "The Devotion of Suspect X" returns in a complex and challenging mystery-several murders, decades apart, without conclusive evidence. DCI Kusanagi once again turned to his university friend, physics professor and temporary police adviser Manbu Yukawa, who was called a Galileo detective, to help solve a series of unproven murders.

"Amy Wu and the Patchwork Dragon" (Simon & Schuster) was drawn by Kat Zhang and Charlene Chua. Amy likes crafting time in school, but when her teacher asks everyone to make a dragon, Amy feels trapped. When her grandmother inspired her with a story, she summoned the whole family to perform a dragon show at school to make it all perfect.

"Born behind Bars" (Nancy Paulsen) of Padma Venkatraman ("The Bridge Home") tells the story of Kabir, who was born in prison because his mother is serving a sentence for a crime she did not commit. When he was released suddenly, he had to fend for himself in the streets of Chennai. Fortunately, another street kid named Rani took him in. How these low-caste children plan their future, and how Kabir has done justice to his mother, these fill the rest of this young adult novel.

Wendy Shang Wanlong's "Rice Ball in the Pot" (Orchard), illustration by Lorian Tu. An ingenious turn of the "wheel on the bus", in which a Chinese meal is celebrated with love and laughter in a multi-generational family.

Pik-Shuen Fung's ghost eater (a world). A novel about Canada's first generation of immigrants, his father decided to stay in Hong Kong, earning him the title of "astronaut" father. A lonely mother and a sick father, a daughter struggled to understand her family history, revealing clues to matrilineal history and the inheritance of stories and silence.

"Madam Clown-Volume One" (Soho Crime) was written by Kaoru Takamura and translated by Marie Iida and Allison Markin Powell. This masterpiece is inspired by the unsolved real crime kidnapping case committed by "21-faced monster". Since it was published in Japan in 1997, it has become a cultural touchstone. It has been adapted into film and television twice. The case involved five conspirators who decided to rob and kidnap the CEO of Japan's largest beer group and squeeze blood money from the company's corrupt financiers.

"Makan: A Cookbook from the Centre of Singapore" (Bloomsbury Absolute), written by Elizabeth Haigh. In her first cookbook, author and restaurant owner Elizabeth Haigh weaves a love letter for Singaporean cooking and family traditions. Growing up, Haigh's mother expressed her love for her through food, and the enthusiasm and love poured into every recipe gathered here. Southeast Asian cuisine is a proud combination of immigrants and influences from all over Asia.

"Intimacy" (Riverhead) by Katie Kitamura. A newly relocated American woman in The Hague serves as an interpreter in the war crimes court. She was accused of crimes against humanity for a notorious former president, and entangled with married men, fighting more and more professional and personal dramas.

"When Lola Comes" (Katherine Tegen) illustrated by Michelle Sterling and Aaron Asis. When her grandmother visited from the Philippines, summer was special for a young girl. There is the aroma of mango jam, interesting stories and her quiet, sweet singing voice in Tagalog. But summer came too early, and when her grandmother was about to leave, she gave her favorite granddaughter another surprise.

Shirley Buchanan's "On the Ho Chi Minh Trail-Blood Road, Defending Its Women, Legacy" (ASIALINK, London). Buchanan reveals the stories of the women who defended the trails from the continuous bombing of the United States—the most ferocious in modern warfare—and the stories of the artists who painted them. She focuses on the real lives of women and men attacked by gunfire, bringing a unique perspective to the history of the Vietnam War.

"Not Here to Be Liked" by Michelle Quach (Katherine Tegen Books). This young adult novel tells the story of a high school girl, Eliza Quan, who considers herself the perfect candidate for school thesis editor until a former athlete white male candidate appears and threatens her ambitions. To thwart his challenge, she wrote a viral article that inspired a feminist movement. But what happens when she starts to like this man?

"Annie's Cradle-The Life and Works of Muraoka Hanako" (Nimbus), written by Muraoka Eri, translated by Kathy Hirano. Muraoka Hanako is revered in Japan for translating L. M Montgomery's classic children's work "Anne of the Green Gables". Thanks to her translation, the book is very popular in that country. This best-selling biography of Muraoka, written by her granddaughter, tells the complex and fascinating story of a woman who risked freedom and risked her life to bring high-quality children's literature to the people during the turbulent period of change in Japan.

"The Tiger Mother's Story" by Lyn Liao Butler (Berkeley). When an American woman inherited the wealth of her Taiwanese family, she went to face their betrayal of the past.

"Yusuf Azeem is not a hero" by Saadia Faruqi (free book with quill pen). A Pakistani-American Muslim boy has high hopes, hoping that he can participate in the regional robotics competition and may even win the competition. But growing up in rural Texas on the twentieth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, he knew he would have to face some obstacles. When some people in the town started to say hateful things to him and his family, he realized that he had to stand up against the bullies.

Chen Haoji's "Second Sister" (Black Cat). When a female student committed suicide by jumping from the 22nd floor, her sister refused to believe it. Next is a cat and mouse game on the streets of Hong Kong, where the eldest sister traces the murderer and the truth about the murderer.

"Ho'onani Hula Warrior" (tundra) is a work of art by Heather Gale and Mika Song. This children's picture book is based on a true story and tells the story of a young girl, even an all-boys group, eager to lead the school to perform traditional hula dance. Will she win people's favor and be accepted?

"We Can Be Heroes" (Mira) is a novel by Mike Chen. Jamie has lost his memory, but has the ability to read and erase other people's memories. Zoe is looking for her past and using her speed and power to provide fast food, and occasionally assaulting bad guys if she wants to. When these two main opponents met in the amnesia support group, they realized that the only way to reveal their hidden past might be through each other. An emotional adventure about impossible friends and the power to choose who you want to be.

"Return to Participation-The Modernity and Historical Trauma of Contemporary Art in Saigon and Phnom Penh" (Duke University Press), Viet Le. The artist and critic reviewed contemporary art in Cambodia and Vietnam to rethink the interweaving of militarization, trauma, diaspora, and modernity in Southeast Asian art.

"Distant Places" by Teow Lim Goh (diode version). The poems in this book exist in the space between wild and tame, from orchid gardens and vast oceans to caged birds and alpine landscapes. It resists narrative, but lives in the remnants of experience. It may be a private dictionary.

Kengo Kuma's "Kengo Kuma-My Architect Life in Tokyo" (Norton). The visionary architect of the New Olympic Stadium in Tokyo, Japan provided an enlightening tour of this complex city. Thoughts and reflections on his most influential buildings and Tokyo's rich architectural heritage. Full of the architect's own drawings and photos of his buildings.

"Jenny Mei Is Sad" (Little, Brown and Company) was written and illustrated by Tracey Subisak. This book introduces young readers to the complexities of sadness and shows them that the best way to become good friends—especially for sad people—is for fun, not fun, and something in between. everything. Both pictures and texts.

Cai Chongda's "Vessel-A Memoir" (HarperVia). This collection of personal essays carefully written by the editorial director of GQ China focuses on his family, friends, and neighbors in his small town. They helped shape him because he is trying to understand himself and his future possibilities as a little boy in a simple way. What will it bring.

Laurel Nakanishi's "Ashore" (Tupelo) is the winner of Berkshire's first or second book of poems. These poems record the language, history and mythology of her hometown of Hawaii, and show a true awe of life.

Weng Pi's new "Let's Say No More" (Drawn & Quarterly). This graphic novel weaves together five generations of women in the author's family, each of which is 15 years old. In the span of 100 years, Pai Yao seamlessly shuttles back and forth in time, and every woman experiences loneliness and affection, hope and a sense of belonging. The bold and energetic paintings are full of beauty and emotion, filling the painful silence between generations.

"The Language of Truth-Prose 2003-2020" by Salman Rushdie (Randon House). The Booker Prize-winning international writer has newly collected, revised and expanded non-fiction works from the first two decades of the 21st century. Use Rushdie's sharpest analytical viewpoint to examine the evolution of literature and culture.

The best-selling young adult author David Yoon ("Frankly in Love") changed the genre with his new adult novel "Zero Edition" (Putnam). A data expert at a social media company saw the dark side of large technology companies and started asking questions about the data they collected. He found himself fired and blacklisted throughout Silicon Valley.

Marwa Al-Sabouni's "Building for Hope-Towards a Building of Belonging" (Thames & Hudson). This book is a memoir about survival and a declaration to understand the seeds of the Syrian civil war. The architect passionately demonstrated the key role of architecture in shaping social reality and rebuilding society from the ground up.

Linda Hess's "Singing of Emptiness-Kumar Gandawa Performing Kabir Poems" (Seagull). In this book, two people separated by five centuries come into contact with each other through poetry, music, and performance. A great 20th century Hindustani classical singer accepted the challenge and sang the songs of the great 15th century poet Kabir.

"Build your house around my body" by Violet Kupersmith (Randon House). A kaleidoscope-like debut, it reads as a puzzle, a revenge story, and a ghost story. It tells the cross-fate of three unforgettable women in Vietnam's half-century history.

"Glyph-Graphic Poetry Translation. Senses" (Tupelo) Naoko Fujimoto. The poet found a new way to connect words and images. Inspired by Emaki (Japanese picture scroll). The poet/artist uses bright colors and designs to bring the words and sentences of each poem to readers from different directions in novel ways. Or as Gabrielle Bates said, “I wandered around the poetry house, and this book showed me a door that I didn’t know existed.”

Rahul Raina's "How to Kidnap the Rich" (HarperPerennial). The irony of modern India tells the story of a poor but smart young man who thought the sons of wealthy parents would take exams for a living so that they could obtain visas and go to the United States.

"The Story of a Boy named Issam-Noguchi Isa" (Viking) was written and illustrated by James Young. Yang imagined the sensibility of an artist talking to us through the heart of a child, when he walked through the world alone but never alone. Beautiful illustrations and alternate but persuasive text.

Tom Lin's "A Thousand Sins of Mingzi" (Little Brown). The debut of this novel reimagines the classic Western movie through the eyes of a Chinese-American assassin who tries to rescue his kidnapped wife and retaliate against the kidnappers. "This book is a thriller, a romantic story, about a person seeking salvation in the face of obvious American atrocities."

Sandi Tan's "Lurker" (Soho). The author lives in her corner of the suburbs of Los Angeles with two Korean-American sisters shocked by suicide, as well as a group of characters such as creepy drama teacher, gay horror novelist, white hippie mother and her adopted Vietnam daughter. Add drama and stir with a smart pen for best results.

"The Multiple Meanings of Meilan" (Kokila) by Andrea Wang. Meilan’s world is made up of several key elements: her family’s beloved matriarch, family-owned bakery and Boston’s Chinatown running; and her favorite Chinese fairy tales. But after her grandmother passed away, things changed, and the whole family was on their way to find a home. This young adult novel explores all the things that can be sad, the big and small injustices that make us angry, and the peace that we unlock when we learn to find a home within ourselves.

"God at the Door" by Tishani Doshi (Bronze Canyon). Dorsey is an award-winning Welsh Gujarati writer and dancer. She published seven books of novels and poetry. This new collection of poems calls on the extraordinary details of nature and humanity to redefine the sense of belonging and expose injustice.

"Finding My Voice" (Soho) is a reprint of Li Mingyu's classic youth novel. This is an eternal growth story about a Korean-American girl who attended an all-white high school in Minnesota. She tried to adapt while being different. When she fell in love with a popular white football player. Can this relationship withstand the small town’s bigotry and family opposition?

The author of "Crazy Rich Asians" Guan Kaiwen returns with "Sex and Vanity" (an anchor), telling the story of the daughter of a Chinese mother born in the United States and a father of New York descent. She always sublimated her Asian side to the white side, and when she found that she was attracted by a Chinese-American, she denied her feelings. When they meet again and the romance breaks out, she must weave a web of deception from her fiancé and family to maintain the relationship. A ceremonial comedy between two cultures.

"Tokyo Ever After" (Iron) by Emiko Jean. It was difficult for Japanese Americans to grow up with single mothers in a predominantly white town in Northern California. But when Izumi, or "Izzy" as she knows it, discovers that her missing father is the crown prince of Japan, things become surreal. Going to Japan to find her father, her life has changed drastically. There is not enough America in the United States, and not enough Japan in Japan. Will Izumi stand on her feet?

Sujata Massey's "Prince of Bombay" (Soho). The latest book of this popular mystery author is the Perveen Mistry series volume. Just as riots broke out in the city streets against British rule, the first female lawyer in Mumbai tried to bring justice to the family of a murdered Parsi student. It happened in Mumbai in the 1920s.

The “Kissing Eyes in the Corner” (Harper) was illustrated by Joanna Ho and Dung Ho. A young girl noticed that her eyes looked different from her friends. This book is a lyrical ode to love yourself. It challenges readers to recognize themselves Its beauty and power ignite a revolution in self-discovery and self-confidence.

"Angel & Hannah – A Novel in Verse" (One World) by Ishle Yi Park. The first love in the heart of the New York block. When a Korean-American girl from Queens met a Puerto Rican-American boy from Brooklyn in Quincecanera, sparks flooded, family opposition and cultural complexity followed. The former Queens Poet Laureate used the language and imagery in the form of sonnets and songs to explode, rejuvenating the light of first love.

"Swim Back to the Trout River" by Linda Rui Feng (Simon & Schuster). It was 1986, and a 10-year-old girl lived with her grandparents in a small village in China. Her parents left a few years ago to go to America to look for opportunities. Now, her father promised to pick her up and take her to the United States before her 12th birthday. The little girl is determined to stay. What she didn't know was that her parents were estranged, carrying the demons of their past. Can a family across the ocean start over without losing themselves or each other? Jean Kwok called this novel "a beautifully written and poignant exploration of family, art, culture, immigration, and most importantly, love."

"Revolution in the Eyes of Raymundo Mata" (Soho) by Gina Apostal. This novel is in the form of a memoir of a semi-blind bookworm and a revolutionary. It covers his education in Manila, his love, and his discovery of writer and revolutionary partner Jose Rizal. This memoir is complicated by the foreword, postscript and footnotes due to the voices of nationalist editors, neo-Freud psychoanalytic critics and translators.

Jody Kim's "Body Facts" (diode version). These poems tell the story of Koreans, Americans, women and the voice of the body. It weaves together the history and aesthetics of South Korea, the childhood and family stories of the speaker, the foreign policy of the United States towards North Korea, and what we do and should not do with our own bodies.

"Made in Korea" by Sarah Suk (Simon & Schuster). The debut of a "rom-com" novel depicts two entrepreneurial teenagers who bumped their heads while running a competitive Korean beauty business in high school—perhaps falling in love.

"At the end of the matinee" (Amazon crossing) was translated by Juliet Winters Carpenter (Juliet Winters Carpenter). This novel, known as a love story and psychological thriller, traces the relationship between a concert guitarist and a reporter for many years, and explores whether this relationship will continue, and may even develop into a deeper level. thing.

"Buried Mountain (Copper Canyon)" by Shang Yangfang. Deeply immersed in the music of ancient Chinese poetry, Fang Zhouzi's debut work combines political obliteration, exile, remembrance, and death. He drew a stroke on silk, and our names were forgotten like paper boats on the water.

Ellen Oh's "Looking for Junikin" (Harper). A young adult novel about a Korean-American girl trying to adapt to school by not showing up. But when racist graffiti appeared in her middle school, she had to make a decision. When the teacher assigned the oral history project, Juni decided to interview her grandparents to learn about the Korean War and the changes in her world.

"Swim to Freedom: I Escape from China and the Cultural Revolution" (Abrams) by local writer Kent Wong tells the tragic story of the author's escape from China when he traveled to Hong Kong. In 1974, it was estimated that half a million "freestylers" fleeing suffering and oppression, braving all dangers, swam to that city.

"Soul Lantern" by Shaw Kuzki (Delacorte Press). Translated from Japanese by Emily Ballistrieri. 12-year-old Nozomi lives in Hiroshima. Although she was not born when the atomic bomb hit the city, she participated in a lantern-raising ceremony to commemorate those killed in the explosion. The names of the victims are written on each lantern, but every year, Ximei realizes that her mother always releases a lantern without a name. As she investigated, complex stories of loss and loneliness began to unfold.

The works of Su Hwang, Samiya Bashir and Monica Youn appear in a new anthology edited by Tracy K. Smith and John Freeman entitled "There is a Revolution Outside, My Love: Letters in Crisis" (retro). This is the timely response of some of the best writers in our country to the "Black People's Fate is Fate" movement in the form of poems, essays, letters and reflections.

The award-winning writer Padma Venkatraman returns with her companion novel "The Bridge House," entitled "Born in a Bar" (scheduled to be released in September 2021). This young adult novel about penguins tells the story of a boy who was accidentally released into the world after spending a lifetime in prison with his mother. Her previous book "House of the Bridge" won the SCBWI Golden Kite Award and was read globally in 2019.

"Like a Dandelion" (Balzer Bray) written and illustrated by Huy Voun Lee. This is a poetic tribute to immigrants and refugees, inspired by the author's childhood experience of emigrating to the United States from Cambodia. Like the feathery seeds of a dandelion, we all fly away and take root in another place.

Isabel Yap's "Never Have I Ever" (Small Beer Press) is a powerful collection of mystery/fantasy short stories that explore topics such as terrible, common trauma, systemic violence, friendship and the ambiguity of love.

Loan Le's "Pho Love Story" (Simon & Schuster) is a romantic YA rom-com in which two Vietnamese-American teenagers must find new love in the ancient dispute between their families about their competing Pho restaurant.

"If I'm a Tree" (Lee & Low) by Andrea Zimmerman, imaginatively portrayed by local artist Jin Jing Tsong. This picture book tells the journey of two brothers and sisters into the forest and how they use the five senses to explore the natural world. Tsong's kaleidoscope-like art brings the wooded world to life and illuminates the author's poetic ode to trees.

Tessa McWatt's "Ashamed of Me-An Analysis of Race and Belonging" (Randon House, Canada). A mixed-race woman raised sharp questions about the necrotic legacy of race, and affirmed kinship and solidarity, and opposed continued silence and discriminatory violence.

"Rabbit Sato" (Magic Lion) was written and illustrated by Ainoya Yuki and translated by Michael Blaskowski. When a boy becomes a rabbit, he discovers that he can find extraordinary things in his daily life, accepting and embracing surrealism in a world of infinite possibilities. Fascinating illustrations can expand your imagination.

Jack Wang's "The Two of Us" (HarperVia). From the disadvantaged and deprived of rights to the educated and privileged, the characters in this series of stories reflect the diversity of Chinese diasporas in the past and present. The Chinese-Canadian author's impressive novel debut.

"Death Fugue" (Restless) was translated by Sheng Keyi and Shirley Bryant. This novel is a dystopian fable of the Tiananmen Square massacre and is banned in China. In this book, the author questions the role of art after the brutality.

"When Father Comes Home" (Orchard) was written and illustrated by Sarah Jung. The father of June is like a goose: he has been flying for a long time, so when he comes home, it is a special moment. This picture book turns the story of the fathers of migrant workers working abroad who hope to broaden the field of opportunities for their children into a warm and reflective story.

Daniel Y. Kim's "Conflict Intimacy-Cultural Memory and the Korean War" (New York University). The author uses novels, movies, and photographs to reconstruct the memory of the war and its significance to Koreans, Asian Americans, and people of color

"The Tangle Root Palace" (Tachyon) by Marjorie Liu ("Monstress"} is her debut, dark, lush, and fascinating fantasy novel. It is full of tricky stories about love, revenge, and new beginnings.

"American Betiya" (Knopf) by Anuradha D. Rajurkar. This YA writer honestly examines the ways in which cultures can conflict in interracial relations. With the theme of sex, artistic expression and appropriation, she spoke for a young girl who claimed to have her own identity. She broke the stereotype once and experienced the complicated experience of her first love relationship.

Larissa Pham's "Pop Song-Art and Intimate Adventure" (Catapult). This is a memoir. Before the author sets his sights on himself, from painting to travel, sex and drugs, he searches for clues and patterns about love and loss in the well of culture.

"Tastes Like War-A Memoir" by Grace M. Cho (Feminist Press). The author is the daughter of a white American Merchant Marine and a Korean barmaid he met abroad. This book covers the process of daughters searching for the roots of mother's schizophrenia through intimacy and global history. In her mother’s later years, the author began to learn how to cook from her mother’s childhood to bring the past into the present and make room for her mother’s multiple voices. In these shared meals, she not only found the breakdown of the smart and complicated woman who raised her, but also found what kept her alive.

"Mr. Jiu in Chinatown: Recipes and Stories from the Birthplace of Chinese and American Food" by Brandon Jew and Tienlon Ho (Ten Speed ​​Press). The famous chef behind Mr. Jiu’s restaurant shares the past, present and future of Chinese cooking with personal stories and recipes. 

"Tell me who you are: share our story about race, culture, and identity" (Penguin Random House) by Winona Guo and Priya Vulchi. Two 17-year-old girls (a Chinese-American and an Indian-American) took a year off after graduating from high school and traveled across the country to ask how American ethnicity affects their lives. Out of 500 stories, they edited this anthology into 115.

"Autumn Light-A Season of Fire and Farewell" by Pico Iyer (retro). Now, in the new paperback, the author has returned to his second hometown of Japan after the death of his father-in-law. He is immersed in the steady mode of daily rituals and reflects when the leaves change color and the heat starts to soften

 "Yang Warrior" (University of Minnesota Press), Kao Kalia Yang, illustrated by Billy Thao. In this inspiring picture book, stubborn Hmong children in refugee camps face difficulties and do everything they can to provide a livelihood for young children and the elderly. From this picture book appeared young heroes who provided the gift of hope.

"Hiroshige-famous sights in more than sixty provinces" (Prestel) by Anne Sefrioul. This book was created by a Japanese master in his later years and contains images of various provinces in Japan. A panoramic view of the Japanese countryside before industrialization and Western influence.

Inspired by the Peabody Award-winning podcast, Sheila Chari's "The Unexplainable Disappearance of Mars Patel" (Walker) is a young adult thriller. As the children disappeared from a middle school one by one, and their parents didn't seem to care, Mars Patel and his team continued to desperately search for answers.

"Drawing a rich map for the future of the planet-Hawaiian Kanaka Maoli and important settlers mapping" (Duke University), the author is Candance Fujikane. Fujikane criticized settlers' colonial mapping for reducing their lives, but instead emphasized the all-round voice of the Hawaiian community and their views on the rich healing and protection of the land.

Tanya Guerrero's "All You Knead Is Love" (FSG). When a 12-year-old girl had to leave her mother to live with her grandmother in Barcelona, ​​she felt alienated. But then she gradually fell in love with the city her mother once called home. She established a connection with her Spanish ancestry, had a close relationship with her Filipino grandmother, and discovered the passion and talent for baking bread. When her favorite bakery was in trouble, she learned what she could do to help.

Angela Mianyang's "Folklore: Novel" (Erewhon) solves complex questions about mythology, science, generational trauma, and identity. It tells the story of a Korean-American physicist in Antarctica who must return to her childhood home in California to deal with the mental illness that runs through her family. It explores the myths we inherited and the myths we have shaped for ourselves.

"Afterparty – Stories" (Ecco) by Anthony Veasno So. This book marks the first appearance of a short story, and it provides insights into the close relationship between queer and the Cambodian American immigrant community. The children of these refugees created a new life in California because they shouldered the genetic burden of the "killing fields" and struggled to cope with the complexities of race, sexual orientation, friendship, and family.

Lucy North's translation of Natsuko Imamura's "Woman in a Purple Dress" (Penguin) won the Akutagawa Prize. It tells the story of two maids whose lives are intertwined and explores jealousy, loneliness, power dynamics and the vulnerability of unmarried women in a tense and suspenseful narrative.

"Kiyoshi's Walk" (Lee & Low) by Mark Karlins, illustrated by Nicole Wong. When a boy watched his grandfather write haiku, he wondered "Where did the poem come from?" His grandfather's reaction was to take him for a walk in the city.

The international bestseller "Kim Jiyong, Born 1982" (Liveright), translated by Jamie Chang and written by Cho Nam-Joo, is now available in paperback edition. It tells the story of an "ordinary woman" of the South Korean millennial generation who fell into mental deterioration because of her severe misogyny. The cry of feminism and gender has resonated among women across Korea.

"Madam Clown-Volume One" (Soho Crime) was written by Kaoru Takamura and translated by Marie Iida and Allison Markin Powell. The center of this book is a crime inspired by a real case in which a food chain was broken and imprisoned for kidnapping. It also examines the Japanese cultural norms and taboos of the past four years with a kaleidoscope lens. This fictional work will appear in several volumes.

"I'm a Bird" (Candlewick), a work by Hope Lim, illustrated by Hyewon Yum. When a little girl rides a bicycle with her father in the morning, she will imitate the sound of a bird. But when she saw a strange woman who was stern and carrying a mystery bag, she became scared. A children’s book that encourages readers to embrace similarities instead of letting our differences divide us.

Illustration by Nasaya Mafaridik, Zanib Mian's "The Incredible Rescue Mission on Omar" (Putnam). Omar was excited about his first trip to Pakistan, but then a tragedy happened. His favorite teacher is missing. Will his teacher be kidnapped by aliens? Omar investigates. Will creative thinking and galactic adventure help solve the mystery of this young man?

"Human Zoo" (Grove Press) is a new novel by American PEN/Faukner Award-winning author Sabrina Murray. This is the story of a Filipino-American woman who arrived home in Manila under the throes of dictatorship. She had to receive her cousin’s fiance to find his roots, deal with the flirting from her ex-boyfriend and coexist with her upper class family. Expires in August 2021.

Rajani LaRocca's "Much Ado About Baseball" (yellow jacket/little bee). When Trish discovered that she and her math competition opponent were on the same summer baseball team, the two had to put aside their hatred and unite to help their team win. Will solving math puzzles help the team succeed? Trish and Ben think so too.

"Winter in Sokcho" (open letter) by French-Korean writer Alyssa Shuya Dusappin is called a novel, just like "Convenience Store Woman" written by Margaret Duras. Among them, a young French and South Korean woman worked as a receptionist in a dilapidated hotel in a border town between the two countries. An unexpected guest arrives, and a French cartoonist is determined to take an interest in this desolate landscape. The two formed an uneasy relationship and let them search for answers.

"The Unicorn Rescue Association-Secrets of the Himalayas (Datton), written by Adam Gidwitz and Hena Khan, is a continuation of the New York Times's best-selling youth series, which tells the story of young members of this group traveling to the rugged mountains of Pakistan to rescue an individual Horned beast.

"Paris Is A Party, Paris Is A Ghost" (FSG) is David Hoon Kim's debut. Henrik Blatand is a translator living in Paris. He was born in Japan and grew up in Denmark. He is a Korean adopter. In Paris, he fell in love with a group of foreigners from South Korea, then fell in love with a Japanese student with a nervous breakdown, and eventually died in her room alone. Troubled by this love, Henrik later became the parent of his best friend's daughter, which reminded him of his lost love. This is a transcontinental story about love, loneliness, strange bonds, race, class, power, and cultural identity.

"The Elephant Doctor in India" (Chicago Review Press), authored by Janie Chodosh. In the Indian state of Assam, a baby elephant got stuck in the mud when it touched a sagging electric wire. Only one person could call-the elephant doctor Dr. Salma. Chodosh spends time with the doctor and shows young readers what this unique veterinarian has done for the elephants he meets.

"Good Words: A Memoir of Dialogue" by Mira Jacobs (One World). This is a graphic novel that explores what it means to be an immigrant and first-generation American. It delves into race, sex, love, and family, and discusses what these issues mean for her family and other parts of the country.

Maia and Alex Shibutani's "Kudo Kids – The Mystery in Manhattan" (Razorbill). The brothers and sisters of the Olympic skating team have already handwritten young adult novels. The Kudo children came to New York to see the scenery, but when a piece of clothing from their fashion designer aunt's collection was lost, they ended up chasing around the city to catch the culprit.

Timon Screech's "Tokyo Before Tokyo-The Power and Magic of Edo City" (Reaktion). A beautifully illustrated book that tells how the new capital of Japan was formed. The background is the broader context of Japanese cultural history and its extensive connections with China and Europe.

Sarah Kuhn's "Little Tokyo from Love" (Viking). Rika is an adopted mixed-race girl with strong judo skills and a hot temper. When she heard rumors nearby that her biological mother was not only alive but also a Hollywood movie star, she continued to look for her. Accompanied by actor friend Hank, she must make some major decisions that may change the direction of her life.

"Dial A for Aunties" by Jesse Q. Sutanto (Berkeley). In this romantic comedy/murder mystery mashup of false identity and sisterhood, a wedding photographer seeks the help of her mother and sisters when she tries to hold a grand wedding for a billionaire client. The body is hidden.

"Kalamata's Kitchen" (Randon House) was illustrated by Sarah Thomas and Joe Cosmeides Edwards. Kalamata and her crocodile pet take children on culinary adventures around the world without leaving your table. In this episode, she feels anxious about her first day at the new school, but she remembers how she felt brave when the new experience seemed scary, and recalled her visit to the Indian spice market last summer. Then unconsciously, young readers learned how to make dal, a spicy Indian lentil stew.

Leonard Rifas' "Korean War Comic Book" (McFarlane). The comic book shows the fictional and fact-based story of the Korean War as it is in and after the battle. Comparing these comics with the events that inspired them can provide a deeper understanding of the comic industry, the "forgotten war" in the United States, and the anti-comic movement. This book examines the dramatization of events and issues, including the origins of war, germ warfare, brainwashing, Cold War espionage, nuclear threats, African Americans in the military, abuse and atrocities against prisoners of war.

"Renegade Flight" (Razorbill) by Andrea Tang. In this YA fantasy adventure, a young trained pilot was found cheating in the entrance exam and was grounded. Eager to rejoin, she participated in a fighting tournament to re-qualify, but found that she had to fight a very attractive nemesis.

Sarah and Joanne Jung's "Dad's Love for Me" (mascot), illustrated by Chiara Civati. A daughter was dissatisfied with her overworked father because he did not have time to accompany her and express his love. When she overheard the conversation between her parents, she realized she was wrong.

"Count down with you" (Inkyard) by Tashie Bhuiyan. An introverted Bangladeshi girl looks forward to taking a break when her demanding parents go abroad. Instead, she was brought to justice, tutored the school's resident bad boy, and then pretended to date. But as the days passed, the two gradually got acquainted, and her life changed.

Hye-Young Pyun's "City of Ash and Red" (Arcade), translated by Sora Kim-Russell. This futuristic novel tells the story of a rodent extermination company sending a rodent exterminator to a foreign country swept by the plague and full of rubbish. It is a story of loss of identity and redemption in a difficult period.

Cookie Hiponia Everman's "We Belong" (dial). In this young adult novel, the author weaves the Filipino mythology with the story of a family's immigration.

"Lily's Dumplings" (Norton), written and illustrated by Melissa Iwai (Melissa Iwai), tells the story of a young girl cooking with her grandmother and how to borrow ingredients and share food in a multicultural apartment building. Pleasant story.

"Count Me In" by Varsha Bajaj (Nancy Paulson). A middle school Indian girl doesn't care about the bad boy next door. But when her grandmother started tutoring him, friendship was established. When racist hatred hurts her grandfather, the two must unite to overcome adversity.

US Senator Mazie K. Hirono's "Heart of Fire-The Story of Immigrant Daughters" (Vikings). The intimate and inspiring life story of the first Asian American woman elected to the US senate and her upbringing in immigrant Hawai'i.

Rajani LaRocca's "Bina's Brothers Bracelet" (Charlesbridge), illustrated by Chaaya Prabhat. In this ingenious picture book, a little girl uses mathematics to determine how she makes colorful bracelets for many of her brothers.

"Utamaro and The Spectacle of Beauty" (Reaktion) by Julie Nelson Davis. This is the second edition revised and expanded. The author reinterpreted this Japanese print artist in the context of his time. Examine the gender, sexual orientation and celebrity roles of Japan's Edo period through Utamaro's works.

"Nina Soni, Sister Fixer" (Peach Tree) by Kashmira Sheth, as painted by Jenn Kocsmiersky. This series is about the adventures of a young Indian-American girl who is looking for a new project and is annoyed by her sister's behavior. Maybe there is a way to solve these two problems at the same time?

"The story of mango, mischief and friendship-a story from India" (Candlewick), by Uma Krishnaswamy, by Chitra Soundar. This volume includes eight original liar stories inspired by traditional Indian folk tales.

"Fatima's Outdoor Activities" (Kokila) by Ambreen Tariq, illustrated by Stevie Lewis. This picture book is to celebrate the first outdoor camping trip of an immigrant family and how it gathered them in a big tent, under the stars.

Jakob Guanzon's "Graywolf" (Graywolf) is a novel about a father and son living on the streets until the last dollar. This is a condemnation of capitalism and the poverty cycle of many people.

Malinda Lo's "Last Night in Telegram Club" (Dutton). It was 1954 and Red Panic Disorder spread in the "Cold War" America. For two teenage girls, this is not the safest place to fall in love. With the deportation of her father, a Chinese-American girl must take all risks to let her love for another person come to light again.

Devika Rangachari's "Queen of Ice" (platypus). This young adult historical novel delves into the turbulent history of Kashmir and Princess Dida of Lokhara in the 10th century. She learned how to maintain her position in a court full of factions and conspiracies.

"Ten Little Dumplings" (tundra) was illustrated by Larissa Fan and Cindy Wume. In Chinese families, boys are traditionally valued, but this weird picture book for children reveals an equally important sister behind the ten little boys in the family.

"All of Me" by Venita Coelho (Harper Collins). A child has been kept in the basement for so long that his personality has split into many roles that become his family. What will happen?

"The Ramble Shamble Children" (Nancy Paulson) by Christina Soontornva, drawn by Lauren Castillo. Five children live in a rudimentary, ruined house. They have everything they need-a garden, eggs, and each other. But when they have the idea of ​​"adjustment", things become different.

"Foreign Object" by Kimiko Hahn (Norton). Inspired by her encounter with Jackson’s collection of rare treasures at the Mutter Museum, the poet investigated the impact of seemingly insignificant objects on our lives.

Zen Cho's "Black Water Sister" (ACE). In the context of modern Malaysia, a modern fantasy story about ghosts, gods and the eternal bond of family bonds. A young woman returned to Penang to reunite with her family while sailing in a world full of ghosts and gangsters.

Two-time Newberry Medal winner Lois Lowry's new book "Horizon-Reflections on World War II" (HMH) is a touching youth account of the lives lost and forever changed in the bombings of Pearl Harbor and Hiroshima.

"Leave Society" (Vintage) is Tao Lin’s first novel since 2013. It tells the story of a 30-year-old novelist working part-time with his parents in Taiwan and part-time in New York, becoming increasingly alienated from friends and the community. When he returned to the United States when he rotated in different places, the novel recorded his growing up as a son, a writer, and out of place. 

Adiba Jaigirdar's "Henna War" (Page Street Kids). This romantic comedy tells the story of two young girls with rival henna businesses discovering that despite the competition, they must accept each other's feelings.

"In the Watching City" (TorDotCom) by S. Qiouy Lu. An unforgettable futuristic story in the second world that feels familiar in nature, centered on transgender, non-binary, queer, mental illness, and Chinese coded identities. It raises an eternal question: "If a city cannot protect its people, what good does it have?"

 Wang Jie's "Sunflower Casting Saves Us from the Void" (Night Ship Books). These poems emphasize the social dimension of dreams, especially the use of dreams to index historical trauma and social processes.

"The Future of Memory-Art and Life after the Great East Japan Earthquake" (Books from the UBC Museum of Anthropology), the author is Nakamura Fuyumi. This is the exhibition catalog of this exhibition recently held at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. It relives the scenes of the earthquake and tsunami that swept northern Japan many years ago, and records how it changed and how it stayed safe. And how to keep it safe has affected its people.

"Quill Tree" (Quill Tree) is Christina Lee's young debut. An aspiring young rocket scientist struggling from her father's death, what does an artistic boy who loves superheroes and comic books have in common? When the two became partners in the science class, they took risks and found themselves, while uniting themselves to face bullying, grief, and their own differences.

 Arundhathi Subramaniam's "Love without A Storm" (Blood Axe Book) is full of poems praising the ever-expanding kinship: passion and friendship, mythical pursuits and modern aspirations, in a world full of dialogue and dissent, delirium and silence .

"American as Paneer Pie" (Aladdin) by Supriya Kelkar. As the only Indian-American child in a small American town, Lekha leads two lives. The Indian cultural world in her home and where she tried to adapt in school because she was bullied for looking different. However, when another Indian girl appeared in school, the situation changed. When racist incidents shake schools, decisions must be made.

"Pandemic-Asia Outlook" edited by Vinayak Chaturvedi (Columbia University Press). A collection of essays by leading scholars in the fields of anthropology, food research, history, media research, political science, and visual research on the impact of COVID-19 in Asia. Reports from China, India, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan and other regions. 

Diana Ma's "Obviously Heiress" (Abrams) is the first book in the epic and romantic young adult series, about the fictitious descendants of China's only officially recognized regent. When a young Chinese woman from Illinois gave up her college plan and started her acting career in Los Angeles, things became strange. When she was filming in "M. "Butterfly" in Beijing, she discovered the Chinese royal heritage in the family that her parents hope she would never know.

"Catcalling" (open letter) is a collection of poems by Li Suhe. This poet is part of a new wave of innovative feminist and queer poetry emerging in Korea today.

"Magic Ramen-Momofuku Ando's Story" (Little Bee) was drawn by Andrea Wang and drawn by Kana Urbanowicz. The true story of the man who invented instant noodles through trial and error in his own kitchen.

"Terminal Boredom – Stories" (Verso) by Izumi Suzuki. This short story introduces readers to a cult figure in Japanese literature who has a unique bias towards science fiction and focuses on technology, gender, and imperialism.

"Forty-two Greens-Poems of Chonggi Mah" (Forsythia) translated by Youngshil Cho. The poet's infinite exploration of the natural world, who won the Korean Literature Award, illuminates the beautiful moments in the subconscious.

Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu's "Skin Experiment-Race and Beauty in the Shadows of Vietnam" (Duke). The author examines the continuing impact of the Vietnam War on contemporary concepts of race and beauty.

Daniel James Brown's "Facing the Mountain-The True Story of a Japanese American Hero in World War II" (Vikings). Based on extensive interviews, this book chronicles the kaleidoscope journeys of four Japanese-American families and their sons in war and their courage in battle and resistance.

"Yolk" by Mary HK Choi (Simon & Schuster). Two Korean sisters who were once as thick as thieves can't stand it anymore. But when one person has cancer, the other person becomes the only one who can help her. Bound by family secrets and illness, will these sisters learn more than they are willing to face?

Stephen Little and Virginia Moon’s "Beyond the Line: Korean Handwriting Art" (LACMA/Prestel) is an exhibition catalogue of a large-scale exhibition that illustrates the introverted beauty and beauty of Korean calligraphy. flexibility. This is the first exhibition held outside Asia, focusing on the history of Korean writing and calligraphy.

"The Sky Beyond the Storm" (Razorbill) is the finale of Sabaa Tahir's popular "Embers in Ashes" series. This fantasy series discovers that the soul catcher must transcend the boundaries of his land and undertake the task of saving or destroying everything he treasures.

"The Amazing Power of Dumplings" by Wai Chin (academic). A teenage girl strikes a balance between caring for her siblings, working in her father's restaurant, and caring for a mentally ill mother. In-depth real-life exploration through the complex gaps of culture, mental illness and family.

"Hokusai-Biography" (Lawrence King) was written by Franceso Matteuzzi and illustrated by Giuseppe Lotanza. A vivid biography tells the story of Hokusai's interesting life and groundbreaking works.

"The Cat Man of Aleppo" (Putnam) is the Caldecott Medal winner of Irene Latham and Kaerim Shamsi-Basha, explained by Yuko Shimizu. This picture book is based on the true story of an ambulance driver in the city. Even if the bomb fell, the war would drive the citizens away, and he still stayed. He began to take care of all the orphaned cats left behind and expanded his charity to children and remaining survivors because of donations to support his efforts.

Paula Yoo's "From whispering to rallying cry-Vincent Chin was killed and the trial that inspired the Asian American movement" (Norton). The award-winning author of children’s picture books made his first appearance on YA, telling the story of the death of Vincent Chin, the verdict that the Asian American community took to the streets to protest, and the groundbreaking civil rights trial that followed.

Laura Imai Messina's "Phone Booth on the Edge of the World" (overlooking). A Japanese woman lost her mother and daughter in the tsunami. When she heard that someone had come to the phone booth to talk to her deceased relative, she went there on a pilgrimage, only to find that her grief did not allow her to answer the phone. A novel based on a true story.

Hannah Testa's "Taking On The Plastics Crisis" (Penguin Studio) is part of the "Pocket Change Collective" series. This is a handy guide on how we can reduce our use of plastic, which can clog our beaches, oceans, and landfills.

"Scholastic" is the latest picture book by the master storyteller/artist Allen Say. In it, he portrayed a young girl named Almond who was a victim of self-doubt and jealous of the talented new girl playing the violin in school. However, through trial and error, she began to find her place in the world and the role she could play.

"NARA" (Del Monico/Prestel/LACMA) is the official catalog of one of the first major museum exhibitions of Japanese artists on the West Coast. It surveys his numerous paintings, sculptures, drawings and installations over the past 30 years. His wide-eyed but vaguely threatening figures are now world-famous, but this exhibition connects his work with the inspiration he drew from the punk rock scene of the early 70s. To this end, the exhibition also includes an anthology of Yo La Tengo's vinyl records. The catalog was edited by Mika Yoshitake, and the text was written by Michael Govan, Yoshitomo Nara, and Mika Yoshitake.

Ye Chun's "HAO-Stories" (catapult). Written by three-time Trolley Award winners, this collection of short stories tells the story of Chinese women in China and the United States turning to sign language and language, walking through the strange landscape of immigration and motherhood in which they find themselves.

"Ten Football Stories" by Shamini Flint (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). In Malaysia in the 1980s, a good half-Indian girl shouldn’t play "boys" sports, but Maya is almighty, because she achieved her goals while pacifying an imperious Indian grandmother and uniting a mixed-race family On the verge of falling apart. A young adult novel that can inspire inspiration.

"How not to be afraid of everything" (Alice James) is a second-grade work by Washington poet Jane Wong to be published in October 2021. This book explores the fragile ways we express and respond to fear: fear of intergenerational trauma and silence, hidden family history. These poems tell about the survival of generations in times that are not always easy.

Kim Bowen's "I'm Waiting for You and Other Stories" (Harper Voyager). Translated by Sophie Bowman and Song Liu. These short stories were hailed by Oscar-winning director Bong Joon Ha as "a breathtaking film art itself." This marked the first appearance in English by one of Korea's most cherished writers, and his mystery novels explored the driving force and the meaning of existence of human beings.

"Smile Shop" (Peach Tree) written and illustrated by Satoshi Kitamura. When a boy went to the market to buy something special, disaster happened and he became penniless. But seeing the smiley shop, his curiosity was aroused, and he went in. Will he find something valuable, or will he return empty-handed, disappointed?

"The Whisperer" (HarperVia), a novel by Yan Geling, translated by Jeremy Tian. Hongmei and Glenn seem to lead a perfect pastoral life in the Bay Area, even though their marriage is breaking down. When a crush contacted Red Guard online, his flirtation turned into obsession. 

"Sagawa Thousand Flower Poetry Collection" (Modern Library) won the "Translated Poetry" pen award for the translator/poet Naka Yasukiko. Now it is reprinted in the new modern library torchbearer series, highlighting women who write in their own way, who are bold, creative and resistant. In Tokyo's avant-garde poetry world, Sagawa is the voice of bold experimentation at the turn of the century. Her life was shortened by cancer at the age of 24, but the words she left behind were lingering.

"Amy Wu and the Patchwork Dragon" (Simon and Schuster), illustrated by Carina Tsai. When a classroom teacher asked her students to make dragons themselves, Amy Wu was stumped until her grandmother's story gave her new inspiration.

"CURB" (Night Boat) is a new collection of poems by Divya Victor. This book records how immigrants and Americans travel through the critical points of daily life, torn apart by violence, and pave the way for a sense of belonging.

Ryan Inzana's "Ichiro" (etching) was a nominee for the Will Eisner Award, won the Asian Pacific American Award, and was the choice of the Junior Library Association. This graphic novel tells about a boy who was raised in Brooklyn by his Japanese mother. He admires his American father. He doesn't know who died in the battle. When he was forced to go to Japan with his mother on a business trip, he left behind a grandfather who was a stranger to him in a country he didn't know. When he found himself fleeing in the land of the mythical gods, he had to figure out who he was and how to escape.

"Séance Tea Party" by Reimena Yee (RH graphics). A lonely girl met a ghost haunting her house and found a new friend. But what happens when the girl grows up and the ghost stays the same?

Monica Sok's "Night Hanging Nails" (Bronze Canyon). A powerful debut, illuminating the experience of the Cambodian diaspora, and reflecting on the role of the United States in Cambodia's escalating genocide. Traveling to war museums around the world reshaped the imagination of refugee children, and powerful voices and testimony poems emerged from these experiences.

"Nina Soni, Garden Master" (Peach Tree) was written by Kashmira Sheth and illustrated by Jenn Kocsmiersky. This young adult series about Indian-American fourth-graders discovered that she and her siblings were working on a garden project under the supervision of their landscape architect mother. What they didn't expect was the unpredictability of nature. Can Nina Soni help this garden survive?

Kim Hyun Sook, Ko Hyung-Ju and Ryan Estrada's "Forbidden Book Club" (Iron Circus). This graphic novel is a memoir of a young adult under the rule of the Korean authoritarian regime in the 1980s. When she joined a reading group, a Korean girl discovered more than just books. This is a dramatic true story about the demise of the democratic system and the ruthless rebellion of reading.

Matthew Oldsman's "Road to the Constellation" (Alice James), a new collection of poems by half-blood poets (expired in March 2022) uses the form of letters to explain issues related to contemporary American society. This book is a metaphysical tribute to the post office and letter writing. It is a way of understanding and establishing meaningful connections with the entire world.

Lila Lee's "Squad Leader Mindy King" ("Aladdin") is part of a series of books about the adventures of a Korean-American girl. In this story, she decides to run for monitor, but first she must overcome her fear of public speaking.

Vann Nguyen's "Eye of Truffle" (Zephyr) is the first collection of poems by the Vietnamese-Israeli poet, translated by Adriana X. Jacobs. In it, she solved the issues of identity and cultural heritage from an emotional and shocking perspective.

"Doughnut Feeding the Squirrels" (RH Graphics) is a graphic novel about two squirrels named Norma and Bailey who conspired to steal the delicious sweetness from a local food truck run by a grumpy baker lock up.

Watanabe Takeshi's "The Story of Blooming-The History of Female Exorcism in the Heian Period of Japan" (Columbia University Press). This is the first extensive study of this Japanese historical story. It reveals 150 years of events in Heian period society written by female writers.

"Pippa Park Raises Her Game" by Erin Yun (Fable Film Publishing House). In this young adult novel, "Great Expectations" is loosely reimagined, and it tells the story of a young Korean-American girl learning how to manage her new life in an elite private school.

National Book Award-winning poet Arthur Shi combined his five-year poems into a new collection of poems in the "Glass Constellation" (Bronze Canyon). These poems incorporate elements from China, Japan, Native Americans, and various Western experimental traditions, and clarify concerns about our endangered planet and troubled species.

Supriya Kelkar's "Strong as Fire, Fierce as Flame" (Tu Books) is a historical novel that tells the story of a young girl in colonial India who became a fugitive widow, but was forced to serve as a servant for a British captain. What will she do when she discovers a British conspiracy against Indian citizens?

 "Some girls walk into the country they come from" (Wave) is a new book by Naka Yasekko, an artist who works in language and translation-alone and in various combinations. For many years, she was solely responsible for introducing various modern Japanese poets to English readers with fresh and ingenious translations. This new volume is a multilingual original and translated poetry work.

"Hello Rain" (Chronicles) by Kyo Maclear by Chris Turnham. This rainy and cheerful play combines a fascinating storyline and rich illustrations, and children will get lost in the joy.

Jennifer Yen's "The Taste of Love" (Razorbill). When a rebellious teenage girl agreed to help her mother's bakery hold a junior competition, she quickly realized that it was an arrangement. All contestants are young Asian Americans carefully selected by her mother. What can she do?

"That is now, now is then" (Grey Wolf Press) is the first new series of Paris Review editor Vijay Seshadri since the 2014 Pulitzer Prize-winning book "Part 3". Rosanna Warren said of the new book: "These are poems that tear apart self-awareness and perseverance. This is the book we need now."

Rajani LaRocca's "Midsummer Carnival" (yellow jacket). When her father, a famous food writer, lost his sense of taste, the 11-year-old girl's dream of becoming a baker and winning a cooking competition was dashed. When she met a boy in the forest, he taught her new natural ingredients. Will the daily magic of baking give her the courage needed to save her father?

"The Earth Turned Upside Down: A History of the Chinese Cultural Revolution" (Farrar Straus & Giroux), translated by Stacy Mosher and Guo Jian, is scheduled to be published on January 19, 2021. Independent scholar in Mainland China. The author witnessed this history firsthand as a student and reporter. His previous book "Tombstone", his authoritative history of the Great Famine, won the Louis M. Lyons Press Conscience and Integrity Award from Nieman Fellows, Harvard and Sweden's Steig Larsson Award. This new book was published in Hong Kong in Chinese in 2016, but it has been banned in mainland China.

Sara Fujimura's "Every Reason We Shouldn't" (Tor Teens). When a teenage girl’s Olympic figure skating dream was shattered, she met a young man at her home skating rink, who was driven to participate in the speed skating Olympics. As competition develops, romance also develops.

"My name will grow as broad as a tree" (Grey Wolf), written by Yi Lei, and translated from Chinese by Pen Changtai and Tracy K. Smith. When talking about this book, Li Yiyun said: “One of China’s most original and independent poets, Yi Lei, not only records the history of China in the past forty years, but more importantly, records a woman’s rebellion and private residence. history."

"The Disappearing Doppelganger Disappears" (Small A) is the work of Matthew Seles, the author of "The Hundred Years Flood". Laura Vandenberg wrote: "How to live in a world that refuses to see you? Matkin's intoxicating battle with his mysterious clone has driven him deeper and deeper into the vast and urgent ocean of this problem-and Seeking possible answers. Creativity and depth, sharp excitement and crazy moving."

Mike Jung's "Back Row Boy" (Levine Querido). When the band geeks, comic book nerds, and best friends Eric and Matt were tired of being bullied by racist remarks and called "gay", they made a plan to meet a famous person in a regional parade. Cartoonist, but the enemy has other ideas.

 "ACE-Asexuality Reveals the Meaning of Desire, Society and Sex" (Lighthouse), Angela Chen. "ACE" explores the world of asexuality and those who find a place in it. Through reportage, cultural criticism, and memoirs, this book shows what we can get from the lens of ACE.

"The Future History of Chinese Contemporary Art" (University of Minnesota), Peggy Wang. In the 1980s and 1990s, a group of Chinese artists became famous in one fell swoop, but their works were simplistically interpreted by the West, often not deep enough. The author made a new evaluation of each artist here, and solved basic questions about art form, meaning and possibility.

 "The Elephant Stealing Girl" (Peach Tree) by Nizrana Farook. An in-depth adventure in the Sri Lankan jungle awaits young readers, because a rebellious daughter of a nobleman stole the queen’s jewelry and asked her to escape on the king’s elephant. How will things develop in the end?

Jamie Marina Liu's "Pink Mountain on Locust Island" (Cafe). In her debut shortlisted for Australia's prestigious Stella Prize, the ancient hazy vignettes are reminiscent of a multi-faceted world full of philosophical anxiety and boring violence. A teenage girl lived a monotonous life in an apartment in Chinatown until her father and boyfriend planned a suspicious business that required her participation.

"Sakamoto's Swimming Club-How a teacher leads an unlikely team to victory" (Kids Can Press), by Julie Abery, illustrated by Chris Sasaki. This picture book tells the true story of a school teacher who can barely swim and how he turned a group of children into skilled swimmers who won Olympic gold medals.

"Sachiko" (Columbia University Press), Shusaku Endo, translated by Van C. Gessel. This novel tells the story of two young Japanese Christians in Nagasaki trying to find love during the painful war years from 1930 to 1945.

"Kimono Culture-The Beauty of Kiso" (Worchester Art Museum), co-authored by Vivian Li and Christine D. Starkman, tells the story of a Kyoto fabric dealer who is the oldest and most prestigious kimono manufacturer in Japan today One of the quotient.

"Anna K-A Love Story" by Jenny Lee (Flatiron Books). The reimagining of "Anna Karenina". This time in the role of a teenage Korean-American girl in Manhattan. 

"Bestiary" (One World) by K-Ming Chang. This debut work brings mythology to life, revealing the origin stories of women and girls who carry the spirit of beasts.

Chen Deping's "Land of Big Numbers" (Sailor). This first collection of stories depicts China's diverse people, their government, and how it came to today. The author is a reporter for the Wall Street Journal.

"Other Satellites-Vietnamese Short Stories of the American War and Its Aftermath" (Columbia University Press), translated and edited by Quan Manh Ha and Joseph Babcock. In this anthology, Vietnamese writers use their own important artistic vision to describe what they call the experience of the American War and its enduring legacy.

Jessica J. Lee's "Two Trees into a Forest-Looking for My Family's Past Between Taiwan's Mountains and Seas" (Hamish Hamilton). This award-winning memoir from Canada begins when the author finds a letter from her immigrating grandfather and traces his adventures in the natural environment of his country.

Shannon Takaoka's "Everything I Thought I Know" (Candlewick). A teenage girl wanted to know that when strange things started to happen, she inherited more than just a heart from the donor. As she searches for answers, what she learns will lead her to question everything she thinks she knows.

E. Lily Yu's "On Fragile Waves" (Erewhon). This debut novel by a local author tells a family's journey from Afghanistan to their final new home in Australia. An adult story and contemplation about exile, belonging, vulnerability and hope.

Margaret Block's "Northwest New Deal Art-WPA and Others" (UW). This book tells the stories of hundreds of Northwestern artists hired by the U.S. federal government under the WPA program. It is also a catalog of exhibitions that accompany the Tacoma Museum of Art. Includes works by Kamekichi Tokita, Kenjiro Nomura and Fay Chong.

"Edge Case" (Ecco) by YZ Chin. The predicament of a Chinese woman living in New York with a work visa gradually diminished as her marriage disintegrated and her choices became fewer and fewer. The author explores our imperfect but lasting relationship with the country and family.

"Goat Days" by Benyamin (Book of Seagulls), translated by Joseph Koyippally. A poor young man in southern India dreams of finding a job in the Persian Gulf country so that he can earn enough money to send home. When his wish became a reality, things did not go as planned, and he was trapped in a slave-like life of herding sheep in the desert. Circumstances forced him to come up with a dangerous plan to get rid of a life of loneliness and alienation. But is this enough?

"Last Tang Stand" (Putnam) by Lauren Ho. In this interesting debut novel, "Crazy Rich Asians" meets "Bridget Jones" and tells the story of pursuing happiness, living intact to 30, and opening up to accept love.

 "Paper Peek Animals" (Candlewick) by Chihiro Takeuchi. A die-cutting book that allows children to peek and pick animals in this crazy search and find journey, which will also attract people's thinking and counting skills.​​

"AN I NOVEL" (Colombia) by Minae Mizumura, translated by Juliet Winters Carpenter. This novel focuses on a Japanese expat's day in the United States. She reflects on her life in this country and why she wants to return to Japan to become a writer and write in Japanese again.

"My First Collection of Haiku Poems-One Picture, One Poem by Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen and Tracy Gallup" And a dream-the classic poems of Japanese haiku masters" (Tuttle). The classic Japanese haiku is imaginatively illustrated in English and Japanese bilingual texts. Each poem has questions for young readers to think about.

"Sacrificial Metal" by Esther Lee (Conduit Books and Mayfly). It won the "Burning Mind" Open Book Award. Sean Dorsey writes that the book "with keen curiosity and deep tenderness in the ever-changing realms of sorrow, touch, witness, memory, and our stubborn human instincts for future plans Dance. With great sympathy, Li's poem reminds us that humans will eventually unlock everything..."

Urasawa Naoki's "Sneeze" (VIZ) is a Japanese manga that collects the fragments and endings of some short films by the author in a collection. Pu Ze's career spans more than 30 years and involves many disciplines. Urazawa is known as one of the artists who changed the history of manga. He is famous for his psychological narrative style and detailed works of art. His story touches human hopes, dreams and potential fears.

Seattle poet Don Mee Choi called Anna Maria Hong "a genius poet of fairy tale language and conventions." This is the former Seattle resident's new book "Fablesque" (Tupelo). She went on to say: "Hong explores the grammar of terror and hunger, survival and abuse in the distorted history, culture and family environment of the Korean diaspora."

Tsering Dorje’s "Forbidden Memory-Tibet during the Cultural Revolution" (Potomac). Edited by Robert Barnett and translated by Susan T. Chen. Through the analysis of experts and the narration of witnesses, the author tells the story of how Tibet was shocked by foreign invasion and cultural obliteration. This book is a long overdue reflection on China's role in Tibet's tragic past.

 "Paper Bell" (The Song Cave) by Phan Nhien Hao and Hai-Dang Phan's translation is a new collection of poems by a poet shaped by the Vietnam War who was forced to restart his teenage life in the United States. His poems testify to the relationship between the two countries and cultures. The delicate balance between.

 Elizabeth Lin's "This Is Love: A Twisted Story" (Disney). A young adult retells the story of Cinderella. In this movie, Cinderella leaves the house where she works and finds a job as a court tailor. Here, she witnessed a big conspiracy to overthrow the king. Can she find a way to save the kingdom?

"From Maybe To Forever – An Adoption Story" (Creston) by ML Gold and NV Fong, narrated by Jess Hong. Telling from the perspective of the older sister, this picture book allows young readers to understand the complicated adoption process at a glance. The colorful works of art show how many different families can have. 

Karen An-Hwei Lee's "Sonata Ink" (ellipsis) imagined Kafka in an angled city, seen through the eyes of a Nisei woman hired as his translator and driver. Los Angeles is regarded as the center of the "wasteland".

The "Story Ship" (tundra) was drawn by Kyo Maclear and Rashin Kheiriyeh. A picture book tells the story of a little girl and her brother who were forced to flee their homes and create new stories with dreams and stories during immigration and crisis.

Tsuma Yuko's "Picador" (Picador), translated by Geraldine Harcout. This novel tells the story of a young woman abandoned by her husband and her two-year-old daughter starting a new life in an apartment in Tokyo. Over time, she must face what she has lost and who she will become.

Jack Levine's translation of "Butterfly Dream" (Tupelo) by Kim Kyung-joo is a historical drama set in the early Joseon Dynasty. He blends magical realism and black humor to tell Korea's fast-growing existentialist fables. This play is a modern fable, telling the ghost of a rapidly changing country that must face it.

Pauline Loh's "Lion Boy and Fan Girl" (Epigram) looks at teenage boys who promise to ban dating and focus on lion dance. But they must fight against unusual girls and cyberbullying. Singapore’s rich culture and fascinating lion dance history make this book a fascinating book for young adults.

Louis Chu's "Eat a Bowl of Tea" (UW) is an influential classic novel that captures the tone and sensibility of everyday life in Chinatown in the United States. The new version comes with a foreword by Fae Myenne Ng and an introduction by Jeffrey Paul Chan.

Quan Berry’s novel "We Ride on a Stick" (Pantheon) is located in a small New England town where the allegations led to the Salem Witch Trials. It looks at the women’s hockey team of the 1980s, and they show off society’s concept of femininity. Find your true self and lasting friendship.

Jin Yong's "Unlocking the Fetters" (Griffin of Saint Martin) is the second volume of one of Asia's most popular martial arts novels, "The Legend of Condor Heroes". Translated by Zhang Yixing.

 "Taiwan in Dynamic Transformation-State Building and Democratization" (UW), edited by Ryan Dunch and Ashley Esarey. This book provides an up-to-date assessment of contemporary Taiwan, emphasizing the country’s emerging countries and their importance to world politics.

 "Liu Xiabao's Journey-From Dark Horse to Nobel Prize Winner" (Potomac), edited by Joanne Leedom-Ackerman and Yu Zhang, Jie Li and Tienchi Martin-Liao. Liu Xiabao is not just a poet with dissident politics. This collection of essays embodies the intellectual and radical spirit of this late literary critic and democratic icon.

"Harris Bin Porter and the Stoned Philosopher" by Suffian Hakim (aphorism). The young Singaporean writer's imitation of Harry Potter is based in Malaysia and flavored with local and popular cultural references.

"Mindy Kim and the Lunar New Year Parade" by Lyla Lee (Aladdin), illustration by Dung Ho. Mindy was very happy to participate in the annual Lunar New Year parade, but things did not go as planned. Can she find a way to celebrate?

"Peach Blossom Spring" (NYRB), written by Ge Fei, translated by Canaan Moss. This novel is the first of the award-winning "Jiangnan" trilogy. This is a legendary story in China in the 20th century. It tells the history of a family from a small village for three generations.

"From Possible to Forever-Adoption Story" (Creston) by ML Gold and NV Fong, drawn by Jess Hong. Telling from the perspective of an eager sister, this is a lovely story about adoption, from a perspective that is often overlooked.

 "Dissatisfaction is their sword, tricks are their shield" (OkeyDokeySmokeyPokey Publishing), in the words of former IE staff member Thomas R. Brierly, is "a kind of cross-persuasion to clarify and educate issues of race, violence, white supremacy, and the United States." "Stick to cruel capitalism..." Go to vvovnn.bigcartel.com to order.

The anti-Asian hate webinar will be held on September 25, 2021. Chaired by Erika Moritsugu, President Biden’s deputy assistant, and many well-known panelists. Try https://tinyurl.com/dfnzumwp.

Jack Straw artist residency program is now open for applications. The deadline for the writers program is Monday, November 1, 2021. The deadline for the artist support and new media gallery program is Monday, November 29, 2021. You can apply online through Submittable. For more information on these procedures, please visit [Email Protection] or call 206-634-0919.

The 2021-2022 heritage art apprentice pair has been selected by the Washington College of Humanities. The 16 teams of artists and craftsmen selected by the Washington Cultural Heritage Center will help preserve traditional skills for our future. Through this program, skilled and experienced master artists will guide apprentices through one-on-one programs throughout the year. Some of the participants include the following – Kagura (Japanese sacred dance) master Kazuko Kaya Yamazaki will guide Gabrrielle Kazuko Nomura Gainor. Srivani Jade, a folk music expert in North India, will guide Vibhuti Kavishwar. The South Indian classical dance form Bharatanatyam will be taught to Dhanshika Vijayaraj by Sandhya Kandadal Rajagopal. Sinae Joy Chek will teach South Vietnamese folk music Tai Tu to Siyeon Park. Madhubani painting is one of the oldest visual art styles in the world, which originated in the prehistoric Indian kingdom of Mithila. It will be given to Harini Ihiagarajan by Professor Deepti Agrawal. The way of eating in Laos is an important part of preserving Lao culture and building a positive relationship with one's own heritage. It will be given to Kitana Ludwig by Professor Phoukham Kelly Bounkeua. For more information about the program and selected artists and craftspeople, please contact Washington Cultural Traditions at waculture.org.

The University of Washington Press issued an appeal to writers working on manuscripts or new book proposals. The editor of this local publishing house wants to contact current and future authors about new projects and book proposals. They invite writers to contact them via email to set up a meeting via phone or zoom. If you are interested, please contact the Executive Editor Lorri Hagman at [email protected].

The Tasveer Film Fund will provide three US$5.000 grants to three South Asian filmmakers who develop short films, documentaries and LGBTQIA film projects in the United States. The deadline is September 25, 2021. For more information, please visit tasveer.org/filmfund.

Poets & Writers' reading and workshop program has funds to provide small grants to cover the cost of reading in King County between now and June 30, 2022 for poets, fiction writers, and creative non-fiction writers. The deadline is six weeks before any event. Email [email protection] for more information.