Poetry News

NBC News Celebrates Craig Santos Perez's Lannan Foundation Literary Fellowship Win

Originally Published: February 22, 2017

Craig Santos Perez has become the first native Pacific Islander to win the Lannan Foundation Literary Fellowship for Poetry, reports none other than NBC News. He joins, notably, fellow awardees Don Mee Choi, Tyehimba Jess, Solmaz Sharif, and Ocean Vuong (John Keene, also a poet, was awarded a fellowship for Fiction). Perez talked to NBC News about the honor:

Perez is native Chamorro originally from Guam and is currently an associate professor in the English department at University of Hawai'i, Mānoa, as well as affiliate faculty in the school's Center for Pacific Islands Studies and Indigenous Politics Program. He is also a co-founder of Ala Press, co-editor of two anthologies of poetry, co-star of a poetry album, and author of three poetry books.

Perez' third book, "from unincorporated territory [guma']," won an American Book Award in 2015, and his second book, "from unincorporated territory [saina]," won the inaugural PEN Center USA/Poetry Society of America Poetry Award in 2011.

Reading Pacific poetry is especially important now considering the threats facing the islands today," Perez said. "Guam and Hawaiʻi are experiencing major military activity due to rising tensions between the U.S., China, Russia, and North Korea. Many islands in Micronesia, such as the Marshalls and Kiribati, are being inundated by rising sea levels. Throughout the Pacific, extractive capitalism (from deep sea mining to industrial fishing) and climate change are endangering human and animal habitats. Pacific poets are vital voices [raising] awareness about these issues."

Perez plans to use the residency associated with the fellowship to complete his next book of poetry, which will be a collection focusing on nature, ecology, environmental injustice, climate change, and food.

Find out more here.