The Halo-Halo Review is
pleased to interview authors in the aftermath of a book’s release. This issue’s
featured writers include Chris Santiago.
What
is your most recent book?
Tula (Milkweed Editions, 2016)
When
was it released?
December 2016
What
surprised you about the response?
Milkweed had
the book launch for Tula at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. This was
in November 2016, the week before the election. For many of us, the next few
months were filled with anxiety and fear. So it was a strange thing to also
feel this immense joy at welcoming the book into the world.
I was
surprised at how some of the ways that the poems in the book were
read—especially the poems about being the son of immigrants, and being part of
an immigrant family—seemed to shift with the changing political climate. It was
like the ground was moving beneath our feet. There was a wonderful review in Chicago
Review of Books that pointed this out, and
pointed to the future as well—how the lines might be read differently in ten or
fifteen years, depending on how views of immigration continue to change.
Tell
me something not obvious or known about the book.
In many of
the poems, especially in the first sections of the book, I elegize my mother,
who was an RN from Ilo Ilo in the Visayas. She wanted to go to journalism
school, but my grandmother refused; this was in the 60s, and awful things were,
of course, happening to journalists. I wrote most of these elegies for my
mother while she was still alive, and she got to read the manuscript of Tula when I began shopping it around.
But she died less than a year before it was chosen by A. Van Jordan as the
winner of the Lindquist & Vennum Prize. So the poems feel a little
premonitory now, but really they were just expressing a love for her and for
what she did as an immigrant in Minnesota to raise my brother and me, and
expressing it through the filter of elegy, but an elegy for the loss of her
language, Ilonggo, and the language of my father, Tagalog, neither of which I
ever learned.
What
are you working on now.
I’m writing
poems, some of which are don’t yet belong to anything, and others of which are
part of a project called Small Wars
Manual. I’m also revising my first novel, which is about chess, artificial
intelligence, and an invented country that is more than a bit like the
Philippines.
*****
Chris Santiago is the
author of Tula, selected by A. Van Jordan as the winner of the 2016 Lindquist
& Vennum Prize for Poetry, and published by Milkweed Editions. A 2018
McKnight Writing Fellow, his poems, fiction, and criticism have appeared in
FIELD, Copper Nickel, Pleiades, and the Asian American Literary Review. He has
also received fellowships from Kundiman and the Mellon Foundation/American
Council of Learned Societies, and was a finalist for the 2017 Minnesota Book
Award. He studied creative writing and music at Oberlin College and received
his PhD in Creative Writing & Literature from the University of Southern
California, and teaches creative writing and Asian diasporic literature at the
University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.
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