The Lengest Neoi
The Lengest Neoi embraces and complicates what it means to err—to wander or go astray; a deviation from a code of behavior or truth; a mistake, flaw, or defect. Beginning with the collection’s title, which combines a colloquial Cantonese phrase (Leng Neoi / “Pretty Girl”) and the English suffix for the superlative degree (—est), these poems wander, deviate, and flow across bodies, geographies, and languages. In this collection from Stephanie Choi, you’ll find the poet’s “tongue writing herself, learning to speak.”
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The Lengest Neoi
The Lengest Neoi embraces and complicates what it means to err—to wander or go astray; a deviation from a code of behavior or truth; a mistake, flaw, or defect. Beginning with the collection’s title, which combines a colloquial Cantonese phrase (Leng Neoi / “Pretty Girl”) and the English suffix for the superlative degree (—est), these poems wander, deviate, and flow across bodies, geographies, and languages. In this collection from Stephanie Choi, you’ll find the poet’s “tongue writing herself, learning to speak.”
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The Lengest Neoi

The Lengest Neoi

by Stephanie Choi
The Lengest Neoi

The Lengest Neoi

by Stephanie Choi

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Overview

The Lengest Neoi embraces and complicates what it means to err—to wander or go astray; a deviation from a code of behavior or truth; a mistake, flaw, or defect. Beginning with the collection’s title, which combines a colloquial Cantonese phrase (Leng Neoi / “Pretty Girl”) and the English suffix for the superlative degree (—est), these poems wander, deviate, and flow across bodies, geographies, and languages. In this collection from Stephanie Choi, you’ll find the poet’s “tongue writing herself, learning to speak.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609389529
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 05/06/2024
Series: Iowa Poetry Prize
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 102
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Stephanie Choi’s poems have appeared in Bellevue Literary Review, New Ohio Review, PANK, Blackbird, and Electric Literature. She is currently the poet-in-residence at Sewanee: The University of the South, and lives in Sewanee, Tennessee.

 

Table of Contents

Contents

/

So Many Wet Feet Everywhere

To Error in Translation

A Voicemail from Grandma: When I Did Not Return

Spine / Vine

A Last Name That Fell from the Sky

Portrait of Louisa Cobb Thompson by an Unidentified Chinese Artist

My Name

Speech Derapy

//

My Last Tattoo

Spinebound

Open Wide

Trace Asymmetries

Autumn Thoughts

The Leng3est Neoi5-2

Diaspora

The Key

On Cacti

Lipogram

Two-Winged Sunset in Penang

///

American | Ghost | Chestnut

////

When I Watched In the Mood for Love at a Bar in Ipoh, Malaysia

Poem Written in My Grandmother’s Dress

The dream was not about missing a train

To Write One’s Name

Emails from Mom

Before We Summit Mt. Washington

Proof of Language Competency

Emails from Mom

Something, Not a Love Poem

Everything, Everywhere, All at Once

Return

/////

Hair (once was)

At Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party

My Mother in My House

Girl Wrapped in Bitter Gourd Vine

Hair (variations)

Granddaughter

Where I Find Her / Where I Leave Her

Lightwell

Hair (now has)

A Tattoo for My Mother

Spring Reflection

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