Blood Belies

Blood Belies

Ellen Chang-Richardson
  • $22.00


April 2, 2024
136 PAGES | ISBN 978-1-989496-87-9

In this arresting debut collection Ellen Chang-Richardson writes of race, of injury and of belonging in stunning poems that fade in and out of the page. History swirls through this collection like a summer storm, as they bring their father’s, and their own, stories to light, writing against the background of the institutional racism of Canada, the Chinese Exclusion Act, the head tax and more. From Taiwan in the early 1990s to Oakville in the late 1990s, Toronto in the 2010s, Cambodia in the mid-1970s and Ottawa in the 2020s, Blood Belies takes the reader through time, asking them what it means to look the way we do? To carry scars? To persevere? To hope?

Advance Praise

“I have never read a poetry collection that is grounded in landscape as distinctly as Blood Belies, Ellen Chang-Richardson’s incisive, frank and gorgeous book. These poems probe at all the landscapes that haunt us – the landscapes of emotion, of trauma, of spaces external and internal – and do so with a precise voice that is sometimes quiet and sometimes roaring to be heard. I am in awe of Ellen’s talent and the small, poetic droplets of truth that have coalesced into this revelation of a book.” – Jen Sookfong Lee, author of Superfan and The Shadow List

Blood Belies is a remarkable collection that explores proximity and the inevitable spaces found within and between histories, lands, truth and ourselves. Thrilling in its fragmentary style, Blood Belies grapples with race, identity and family as the poet seeks out a new lexicon amidst the Canadian snowdrifts and archives. With every ‘like:,’ ‘like:,’ ‘like:,’ Ellen Chang-Richardson folds the reader closer and closer into a world where ‘memory, / has a way / of skewing,’ where stories are told, untold, retold; where poetry is a language for survival. Chang-Richardson’s voice is at once intimate, perceptive and unforgettable.” – Gillian Sze, author of Quiet Night Think

Blood Belies explores fraught counterpoints between surface and depth, exposing enduring histories of racism and environmental neglect. In a fluid carousel of text, disruption, white space, image and narrative, Chang-Richardson’s urgent, inventive structures react to and subvert received hypocrisy, where each fugitive subtext weaves fracture into art.” – David O’Meara, author of Masses on Radar

Reviews

Interviews

my May 13th interview with Ellen Chang-Richardson (Bruce Kauffman, finding a voice, 14/06/2024)
An interview with Ellen Chang-Richardson with a short reading of newer work.

Ellen Chang-Richardson's BLOOD BELIES (Alan Neal, All in a Day with Alan Neal, 05/04/2024)
Ellen talks to Alan before their book release at Club Saw.

Ellen Chang-Richardson Confronts the Past and Perseveres in Their Debut Poetry Collection (Open Book, 04/04/2024)
"The truth is, we are all of the same beating heart—the same flesh, bone, liquid, shit—it’s the misguided concepts of what blood entails that deceive us."

No Filter – March 25, 2024 (Ming Wu, No Filter, 25/03/2024)
Ming Wu interviews Ellen about Blood Belies.

Articles

Spotlight series #103 : Ellen Chang-Richardson (rob mclennan, Medium, 04/11/2024)
It's wonderful to see Ellen Chang-Richardson in rob mclennan's Spotlight series.

A Node in the Nebulae (Plenitude Magazine, 02/04/2024)
Ellen shares an excerpt from their collection.

Blood Belies (2024 Debuts, 05/03/2024)
A wonderful mention of Ellen Chang-Richardson's Blood Belies is up at 2024 Debuts.

Excerpt

Click here to read an excerpt of Blood Belies.

About the Author

Ellen Chang-Richardson is an award-winning poet of Taiwanese and Chinese Cambodian descent whose multi-genre writing has appeared in Augur, The Fiddlehead, Grain, Plenitude, Watch Your Head: Writers and Artists Respond to the Climate Crisis, The Spirits Have Nothing to Do with Us: New Chinese Canadian Fiction and others. The co-founder of Riverbed Reading Series, they are a member of Room’s editorial collective, long con magazine’s editorial board and the creative poetry collective VII. They are represented by Tasneem Motala at the Rights Factory and currently live on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Nation (Ottawa, Canada).

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