Chuan Sha
A photograph of Chuan Sha taken in 2012
A photograph of Chuan Sha taken in 2012
Born
Yin Xiangze

1952

Chuan Sha (川沙) is a Chinese-born Canadian poet and author. He has written novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays and literary reviews.[1]

Biography

Chuan Sha was born in Chongqing in Sichuan Province, though he has ancestry in Shandong Province. After graduating from Sichuan University, he worked as editor-in-chief for a literary magazine for some years before pursuing further studies in the United Kingdom in 1991. He has lived since 1999 with his family in Toronto.

He has been editor-in-chief for two Canada publishing houses and for a number of local newspapers. He is now the Director of the Chinese-Canadian Poets Association, Dean of Daya Institute of Cultures of Canada, Co-Chair of the Daya Literary Prize Committee, and CEO of the Daya Academic Evaluation and Judgment Committee. In addition, he is a member of the Chinese PEN Society of Canada.

Works

Prose

  • The Lady in the Blue-Flowered Mandarin Gown 蓝花旗袍 (Huashan Literature and Art Publishing House, China, June 2012) ISBN 9787551103480 - novel
  • The Sunlight (Taiwan Commercial Press, Ltd., November 2004) - novel
  • The Sojourners (Taiwan Buffalo Publishing House, May 2004) - short stories, co-authored

Poetry

  • Appreciation: Selected Poems of Chuan Sha 川沙诗歌精品欣赏 (Hebei Education Press, China, June 2010) ISBN 9787543477209
  • "The Wolves are Roaring", translated by Liu Hong, in Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia, and Beyond, edited by Tina Chang, Nathalie Handal, Ravi Shankar (W. W. Norton & Company, U.S.A., 2008)
  • Spring Night 春夜集 (Guangxi Normal University Press, February 2006) ISBN 9787563359301
  • contribution to Variety Crossing Vol. 8 (Korean-Canadian Literary Forum, 21 Press, 2006)
  • The Shadowy Crowds (China's Writers Printing House, November 2001)

Performances

  • Harmony. Original poetry edited in 6-Act Choir. Public performances given in the P.C. Ho Theatre on November 1, 2008.[2]
  • The Skirts Are Singing. Original Poetry edited in 4-Act Musical. Public performances in O.I.S.E. Theatre, University of Toronto, and in York Woods Public Library Theatre, 2005.

See also

References

  1. Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia, and Beyond, edited by Tina Chang, Nathalie Handal, Ravi Shankar (W. W. Norton, 2008), p. 610.
  2. Reviewed in Global Chinese Press Archived 2013-10-03 at the Wayback Machine, Toronto, 3 November 2008.
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