8622 N. Lombard St., Portland, OR 97203 * 503-283-0032 * info@stjohnsbooks.com * TU 10-6, WED-SAT 10-8, SUN 12-5, MON CLOSED *
8622 N. Lombard St., Portland, OR 97203 * 503-283-0032 * info@stjohnsbooks.com * TU 10-6, WED-SAT 10-8, SUN 12-5, MON CLOSED *
| Sat | ||
|---|---|---|
Start: 7:00 pm
Author and translator Bill Porter presents work from his newest book, Guide To Capturing a Plum Blossom, due to be published shortly by Copper Canyon. He'll be joined for this evening by Eric Paul Shaffer, a resident of Hawaii, who will read from Lahaina Noon and other books of poetry.
In 1972, Bill Porter left
America and moved to a Buddhist monastery in Taiwan. After more than
three years with the monks and nuns, he struck out on his own and
supported himself by teaching English and later by working as a
journalist at English-language radio stations in Taiwan and Hong
Kong. During this time, he married a Chinese woman, with whom he has
two children, and he began working on translations of Chinese poetry
and Buddhist texts. In 1993, he returned to America so that his
children could learn English, and he has lived ever since in Port
Townsend, Washington. Produced under the pseudonym 'Red Pine,' his translations have been honored with a
number of awards, including two NEA translation fellowships, a PEN
translation award, the inaugural Asian Literature Award of the
American Literary Translators Association, and more recently a
Guggenheim Fellowship, which he received to fund a project entitled
Mountains and Rivers of Chinese Poetry, which he calls the poetry
version of his book Zen Baggage,
which recounts a pilgrimage to sites in China associated with the
beginning of Zen Buddhism.
Eric Paul Shaffer is
author of five books of poetry, including Lāhaina Noon;
Living at the Monastery, working in the Kitchen; and Portable
Planet. His poetry appears in North American Review,
Slate, Ploughshares, and The Sun Magazine,
Australia’s Island and Quadrant, Canada’s CV2,
Dalhousie Review, Event, and Fiddlehead, Éire’s
Poetry Ireland Review and Southword Journal, England’s
Stand and Magma, and New Zealand’s Poetry NZ
and Takahe. Shaffer received the 2002 Elliot Cades Award for
Literature, a 2006 Ka Palapala Po‘okela Book Award for Lāhaina
Noon, and the 2009 James M. Vaughan Award for Poetry. He lives
on O‘ahu and teaches at Honolulu Community College.
| ||