Fish Sauce by Anhthao Bui

Fish Sauce by Anhthao Bui
Fish Sauce is realistic fiction, and Anhthao’s second anthology collection.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

YELLOW FLOWER by Anhthao Bui






YELLOW FLOWER

Author: Anhthao Bui
Paperback: 104 pages
Publisher: AuthorHouse (July 12, 2007)
Language: English
6x9 softcover
ISBN-10: 143432297
ISBN-13: 978-1-4343-2279-1
Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.3 inches
Yellow Flower is available at amazon.com, barnesandnobles.com, borders.com, target.com, wallmart.com, and your local bookstores


Yellow Flower is a poetry collection marking her 11- year marathon toward the publications of her own literature. With almost 60 poems, Yellow Flower reveals Bui’s secret life of inner struggles and conflicts—love, patriotism, anger, regret, and self-doubt. Although pain and sorrow are the major themes, some positive poems are full of hope and appreciation toward the United States and its people.
Yellow Flower is the book for those who are seeking to read emotional poetry.
Anhthao wishes to dedicate Yellow Flower to the celebration marking San Jose State University's 150th anniversary.
ANHTHAO BUI
Anhthao Bui had lived in Saigon, Vietnam before she migrated to San Jose, California in late 1996. She started learning English as a Second Language at Evergreen Valley College in San Jose in the fall of 1997. She transferred to San Jose State University in the fall of 2000, and graduated in May 2004. Anhthao Bui earned her bachelor of arts in English.
Ms. Bui's background is multicultural and includes education in French, Vietnamese, Buddhism, Catholicism, Confucianism, Communism, and Western Civilization.
Anhthao Bui continued her education at National University in San Jose in June 2005, but soon discontinued her pursuits for her personal reason.

INTRODUCTION

Anhthao Bui cautiously entered my classroom of Steinbeck students, English 167. She had launched into an English major at San Jose State, a typically determined move by this Vietnamese immigrant, a woman with a mission. “I fell down the first time I was assigned to the English War/Considering I was an ordinary hero without armor,” she writes in a poem about her confrontations with language. Indeed, for anyone who knows Anhthao, her struggles to master and teach the English language have had the classical dignity of this poem that describes her assault. But Anhthao rearmed herself again and again, earning a degree, finding a job. She wrote for her classes, and she wrote for herself:

Collecting last breaths
Growing in obscurity
Conquering the ruin

A yellow flower
Emerges in a deep jungle
Radiates the world

Like that flower—and the title of this collection—Anhthao radiantly emerges here as a poet of great promise. This collection is characterized by the honesty which is always hers, “My poetry is written in/Tears and blood.” As she traces her passions and admits her loneliness or sense of failure, she reveals, if briefly, her interior landscapes. And the poems change moods frequently, as she ranges over a broad poetic field: love, death, university libraries, family, job, America. What is revealed in these poems is an immigrant’s appreciation of this complex country: the dream seems more tangible when a newcomer embraces it, and American leaders more profound when seen through her eyes. Poignantly, her poems bear the stamp of her reading as an English major, both in epigraphs and in this, one of the loveliest in the collection, a Whitmanesque reflection.

NATURE

A pair of white breasts
A pair of black breasts
A pair of small breasts
A pair of big breasts
A pair of short breasts
A pair of long breasts
A pair of firm breasts
A pair of wrinkled breasts
Bathe in the same spring
Blocked by many rocks
And green trees
What kind of women are they?
They are not shameful
When men see their naked bodies
They do not fear danger
In a deep jungle

Anhthao’s poems bear the deep stamp of her gratitude and boundless generosity of spirit.

Susan Shillinglaw, Professor
Department of English and Comparative Literature
San Jose State University

YELLOW FLOWER





YELLOW FLOWER

Author: Anhthao Bui
Paperback: 104 pages
Publisher: AuthorHouse (July 12, 2007)
Language: English
6x9 softcover
ISBN-10: 143432297
ISBN-13: 978-1-4343-2279-1
Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.3 inches
Yellow Flower is available at amazon.com, barnesandnobles.com, borders.com, target.com, wallmart.com, and your local bookstores.

Yellow Flower is a poetry collection marking her 11- year marathon toward the publications of her own literature. With almost 60 poems, Yellow Flower reveals Bui’s secret life of inner struggles and conflicts—love, patriotism, anger, regret, and self-doubt. Although pain and sorrow are the major themes, some positive poems are full of hope and appreciation toward the United States and its people.
Yellow Flower is the book for those who are seeking to read emotional poetry.
Anhthao wishes to dedicate Yellow Flower to the celebration marking San Jose State University's 150th anniversary.
INTRODUCTION

Anhthao Bui cautiously entered my classroom of Steinbeck students, English 167. She had launched into an English major at San Jose State, a typically determined move by this Vietnamese immigrant, a woman with a mission. “I fell down the first time I was assigned to the English War/Considering I was an ordinary hero without armor,” she writes in a poem about her confrontations with language. Indeed, for anyone who knows Anhthao, her struggles to master and teach the English language have had the classical dignity of this poem that describes her assault. But Anhthao rearmed herself again and again, earning a degree, finding a job. She wrote for her classes, and she wrote for herself:

Collecting last breaths
Growing in obscurity
Conquering the ruin

A yellow flower
Emerges in a deep jungle
Radiates the world

Like that flower—and the title of this collection—Anhthao radiantly emerges here as a poet of great promise. This collection is characterized by the honesty which is always hers, “My poetry is written in/Tears and blood.” As she traces her passions and admits her loneliness or sense of failure, she reveals, if briefly, her interior landscapes. And the poems change moods frequently, as she ranges over a broad poetic field: love, death, university libraries, family, job, America. What is revealed in these poems is an immigrant’s appreciation of this complex country: the dream seems more tangible when a newcomer embraces it, and American leaders more profound when seen through her eyes. Poignantly, her poems bear the stamp of her reading as an English major, both in epigraphs and in this, one of the loveliest in the collection, a Whitmanesque reflection.

NATURE

A pair of white breasts
A pair of black breasts
A pair of small breasts
A pair of big breasts
A pair of short breasts
A pair of long breasts
A pair of firm breasts
A pair of wrinkled breasts
Bathe in the same spring
Blocked by many rocks
And green trees
What kind of women are they?
They are not shameful
When men see their naked bodies
They do not fear danger
In a deep jungle

Anhthao’s poems bear the deep stamp of her gratitude and boundless generosity of spirit.

Shillinglaw, Susan, Professor
Department of English and Comparative Literature
San Jose State University


PART I MUSE

“If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.”
Emily Dickinson

Poetry is the shortest way to express myself

Poetry is the bridge to connect society and me



PART II CONFLICT

“Where there's marriage without love, there will be love without marriage.”
Benjamin Franklin



PART III LOSS

“Wise men ne’er sit and wail their loss,
But cheerly seek how to redress their harms.”
Shakespeare, Henry VI, part III (V, IV)


PART IV LOVE

I am two fools, I know,
For loving, and for saying so
In whining poetry.
John Donne, “The Triple Fool”


PART V KNOWLEDGE


“Every one of us gets through the tough times because somebody is there, standing in the gap to close it for us.”
Oprah Winfrey,


PART VI AMERICA

“This is America: ...- a brilliant diversity spread like stars, like a thousand points of light in a broad and peaceful sky.”
George Bush, “Acceptance Speech” August 18. 1988




PART VII FAMILY

“All happy families are like one another; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”
Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina



PART VII FAMILY

“All happy families are like one another; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”
Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina


PART IX DEATH

Dying
Is an art, like everything else.
I do it exceptionally well.
Sylvia Plath, “Lady Lazarus”



PART X MISCELLANEOUS

“You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing you think you cannot do.”
Eleanor Roosevelt








QUOTES by Anhthao Bui

MY QUOTES

“I am a precious maple hiding in a deep jungle.”

“The Unites States is a mirror, which reflects a Vietnamese spirit.”

“Technology serves my creativity.”

“Life is short; achieve my goals first.”

“Education makes me humble.”

“Knowledge gives me strength and confidence.”

“Writers are the loneliest creatures in their own world.”

“The artists’ hearts are hypersensitive like musical instruments.”

“Diligence supersedes slow learning.”

“Nothing is easy.”

“My success is paid off with tones of failures.”

“The battle between God and me never ends.”

“Give me a chance, I will give you the world.”

“If I want to succeed, I must lock my ego in a drawer.”

“Be on the alert for other’s mistakes that might be mine.”

“Do not let my mood interfere in my task, but let it flourish in my writing.”

“When I look in a mirror once, I might look in my conscience hundreds of times.”

“While I may look in a mirror once, I might look in my conscience hundreds of times.”

“Wearing alien writing shoes, I am traveling over the oceans and walking through the jungles to taste the spicy New World.”

“Playing piano measures my brain’s work and my anxiety.”

“I start reaching my literary goal with total enthusiasm and end it with sour tears and bitter thorns.”

“Learning piano teaches me patience.”

“A nude body is God’s incarnation.”

“Nude photos bring you back to nature.”

“Sex is a token of love.”

“A popular person may accept society’s strict judgments.”

“Throwing in a popular world, one may accept society’s strict judgments and face intense scrutiny.”

“ True understanding between individuals does not derive from their academic degrees, their social hierarchies, nor their prosperous levels, but it is the equal of their universal knowledge and their diplomatic conducts.”

“Each individual is a mysterious island and an interesting book, which I want to discover.”

“True love respects each other.”

“Watching a talent teacher is as delighted as eying Leonard de Vinci’s Mona Lisa.”

“Forgiving is easier than forgetting.”

“When I do good deed, I would like people to call me, “Ms. Bui,” who is the youngest child of my parents. However, when I do evils, I want people to criticize Anhthao, an independent individual, who lacks her father’s teaching in early childhood and who is a wild bush growing among natural prairie.”

“The more I experience discrimination, the more I wish to write.”

“Silence is the most powerful act to confuse the opponents.”

“Individual’s identity and attitude create one’s fate.”

“People show their jealousy and inferior complex by castigating one another.”

“Failure ignites my success’s flaming determination in the United States.