three poems
According to the tentative plan, I will write about once a week, because I have read a lot of books recently (it was all my fault in preparing for the lesson, it must be like this).
A book of Li Tianming, I don't know that Li You wrote new poems, and it makes sense. When I was in middle school, Li Tianming was all the rage and was the first Hong Kong philosopher I knew (probably not only in Hong Kong). I have never read his series of philosophical works, so I cannot comment. The poems are moderately spaced, and I suspect that the book is only because Li wants to sort out the scattered sentences that he has accumulated to keep a record or commemorate it. yes?
A book of Yangcheng attracts the cover because it has "Contemporary Hong Kong Poets Series" printed on it. I have never heard of it, so I must read it. This is a reference book that I would have liked to have in middle school, when I wrote new poems in a random and serious way, which is the style. After reading, you can probably write faster, or you don't need to write at all. There are scenes, events, and emotions. Perhaps that generation of Hong Kong people has a lot of family and country feelings. Of course, there are poems and so on. Also check "Yangcheng", whose real name is Yang Chijun, "in 1989, he started the first children's literature course in Hong Kong at the School of Education of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and served as the editor of the "Journal of Basic Education". The boy has eyes and does not know Mount Tai. Of course, I have never heard of such things. Who is to blame, irresponsibly, who taught me to enter the school when the school of education fell behind and was too far behind?
Finally, I wrote about Liao Weitang. I participated in his poetry workshop when I was in college, and I liked it for a year or two after graduation. I remember that he published a poem about the reporter hostage incident in Ming Pao Daily Life. One of the things I admire most about him right now is that he is a dad who is very willing to have kids. This is his old work from the 00's.
There are more and more people writing poetry in Hong Kong, but my favorite is still Wen Yiduo.
References:
Hong Kong Society for the Study of Children's Literature: Founding President
http://hkclraorg.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_60.html
Of all the identities, I would most like to be called a poet: Liu Weitang's new poetry lesson
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