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Th? Tr?n D? T?: Tr?n D? T? - Collected Poems

AUTHOR Từ, Trần Dạ
PUBLISHER Blurb (01/29/2026)
PRODUCT TYPE Paperback (Paperback)

Description
The first volume including collected poems from his sixty years of work. About the author: Trần Dạ Từ was born in Hải Dương, northern Vietnam. In 1954, during the partition of the country, he went to Saigon, where he became a journalist and prominent poet. During 1963, he was jailed by the Ng Đ nh Diệm government for his dissident views, then imprisoned for 12 years by the Communists from 1976-1988, after the collapse of South Vietnam. His wife, the famous novelist and poet Nh Ca, the only South Vietnamese female writer among 10 black-listed as "cultural guerrillas" by the Communist regime, was also imprisoned from 1976-1977. In 1989, a year after Trần Dạ Từ was released from prison, the couple and their children received political asylum from the Swedish government, but later moved to the US and now live in Southern California. His poetry-most notably the 4,000-line "The Stone that Generates Fire" ("H n Đ L m Ra Lửa"), was translated by Cuong Nguyen and featured in Writers and Artists in Vietnamese Gulag, eds. Nguyễn Ngọc B ch and Ruth Talovich (Century Publishing House: 1990). The seminal poem "Tặng Vật Tỏ T nh" has been translated variously into English as "Gifts as Tokens of Love" (Huỳnh Sanh Th ng), "Love Tokens" (Linh Dinh), and "A Gift of Barbed Wire" (unknown translator, but used as title of a book by Robert S. McKelvey about America's abandoned allies in South Vietnam, published by University of Washington Press in 2002). "Gifts as Tokens of Love", "Drinking Song" ("B i H t Mời Rượu"), and "The New Lullaby" ("Lời Ru Mới")--all from Declaration of Love in the Night--were translated by Huỳnh Sanh Th ng and appeared in An Anthology of Vietnamese Poems, ed. Huỳnh Sanh Th ng (Yale University Press: 1996); and From Both Sides Now, the Poetry of the Vietnam War and its Aftermath, ed. Philip Mahony (Scribner: 1998).
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Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780464694465
ISBN-10: 0464694469
Binding: Paperback or Softback (Trade Paperback (Us))
Content Language: Undetermined
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Page Count: 408
Carton Quantity: 18
Product Dimensions: 6.00 x 0.91 x 9.00 inches
Weight: 1.31 pound(s)
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Poetry | General
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The first volume including collected poems from his sixty years of work. About the author: Trần Dạ Từ was born in Hải Dương, northern Vietnam. In 1954, during the partition of the country, he went to Saigon, where he became a journalist and prominent poet. During 1963, he was jailed by the Ng Đ nh Diệm government for his dissident views, then imprisoned for 12 years by the Communists from 1976-1988, after the collapse of South Vietnam. His wife, the famous novelist and poet Nh Ca, the only South Vietnamese female writer among 10 black-listed as "cultural guerrillas" by the Communist regime, was also imprisoned from 1976-1977. In 1989, a year after Trần Dạ Từ was released from prison, the couple and their children received political asylum from the Swedish government, but later moved to the US and now live in Southern California. His poetry-most notably the 4,000-line "The Stone that Generates Fire" ("H n Đ L m Ra Lửa"), was translated by Cuong Nguyen and featured in Writers and Artists in Vietnamese Gulag, eds. Nguyễn Ngọc B ch and Ruth Talovich (Century Publishing House: 1990). The seminal poem "Tặng Vật Tỏ T nh" has been translated variously into English as "Gifts as Tokens of Love" (Huỳnh Sanh Th ng), "Love Tokens" (Linh Dinh), and "A Gift of Barbed Wire" (unknown translator, but used as title of a book by Robert S. McKelvey about America's abandoned allies in South Vietnam, published by University of Washington Press in 2002). "Gifts as Tokens of Love", "Drinking Song" ("B i H t Mời Rượu"), and "The New Lullaby" ("Lời Ru Mới")--all from Declaration of Love in the Night--were translated by Huỳnh Sanh Th ng and appeared in An Anthology of Vietnamese Poems, ed. Huỳnh Sanh Th ng (Yale University Press: 1996); and From Both Sides Now, the Poetry of the Vietnam War and its Aftermath, ed. Philip Mahony (Scribner: 1998).
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Paperback