My American Kundiman
Winner, 2006 Book Award in Poetry, Association of Asian American Studies
Winner, 2007 Global Filipino Literary Award
Finalist, 2007 Members' Choice Award, Asian American Writers' Workshop
This pulsating collection, winner of the Global Filipino Literary Award and finalist for the Members' Choice Award at the Asian American Writers' Workshop, picks up the beat and imagery of Patrick Rosal's thrilling debut, Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive. Here, though, the poet's electric narratives and portraits extend beyond the working class streets of urban New Jersey. Modeling poems on the kundiman, a song of unrequited love sung by Filipinos for their country in times of oppression, he professes his conflicted feelings for America, while celebrating and lamenting his various heritages.
My American Kundiman at Persea Books.
Praise for My American Kundiman:
"Rosal's vividly syncretic, even sexy works find the present haunted by the recent past, the personal within the political."—Publisher's Weekly
"One of the many fabulous poems in My American Kundiman ends 'like brohters/we put the first bite in one another's mouths,' a phrase which reflects the magic and intimacy of this collection, one in which friends, strangers, lovers, and malevolents are poked and caressed with devilish charm, bitten and kissed in the same breath by blues, odes, and elegies. Every heartbreak, grief, and outrage in this book is laced with a hopefulness born not just of Patrick Rosal's tremendous gifts as a poet, but of his humanity." —Terrance Hayes
"Rosal’s love songs to those outside the conveyances of upward mobility, his ability to convey the grace of characters cast as convicts and beasts, his celebrations of the mothers and lolas and lovers who hold the world in balance all establish him as a poet of extraordinary creativity, breadth, and force. On my shelves, Rosal’s books rub shoulders with collections by Al Robles and Muriel Rukeyser -- fit company indeed for a writer who is transforming the voice and verse of America." —Theresa Tensuan, Haverford College
Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive
Winner, 2003 Members' Choice Award, Asian American Writers' Workshop
Finalist, 2003 Literary Award, Asian American Writers' Workshop
Marking the intersection of traditional poetic craft and the raw energy of contemporary performance-based work, Patrick Rosal's poems ring with the music of no-frills industrial towns of northern New Jersey. In poems like “You Clubhouse Boys” and “A Good Day,” Rosal does time with B-boys and condemned men (whose misdeeds as youths forever shaped their futures). These portraits alternate with heated explorations of longing—sexual and filial—in pieces such as “The Basque Nose” and “Notes for the Unwritten Biography of My Father, an Ex-Priest,” while other poems dig deep into manhood and the poet’s Filipino roots. What unifies Rosal work—beyond his breathtaking capacity for rhythm—is a compassion that permeates even the most morally ambiguous situations. Unpredictable and breathtaking as a perfect sax solo, these poems are the indelible marks made by a world that has been simultaneously kept close and left behind.
Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive at Persea Books.
Praise for Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive
"[A]n astonishing first collection... Urgent, rhythmic (it has the swing without which it don't mean a thing), this is a passionate and elegiac book that claims a place of its own in American poetry's present and bodes well for American poetry's future." —Thomas Lux
"Part immigrant-song, bildungsroman, family-chronicle, and love story, Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive is nearly overwhelming in its beauty. Rosal, almost sorcerous in his abilities, has called up a language, a hurricane, a world, a searing meditation...This is a book from whose pages you'll emerge (in no particular order): shaken, heartbroken, annealed, made new. A virtuoso performance!" —Junot Díaz
"Patrick Rosal's poems rush headlong toward your heart, baring what they know with a merciless candor that makes their compassion all the more persuasive. rosal's bottom-line love of language offers a feast of wards to surprise and pleasure the tongue. This is a bold, keen, powerful debut." —Joan Larkin
"Rosal is a second-generation Filipino whose heritage is a rich part of his work, but he is also an all-American urban kid...[with] the boastful beat of hipp-hop...playing in the back of his head...In Rosal's world, beauty and pleasure are contagious. So is the charm of his poetry." — Time Out New York


