Janice Lee(she/they) is a Korean American writer, teacher, spiritual scholar, and shamanic healer. She is the author of 7 books of fiction, creative nonfiction & poetry, most recently: Imagine a Death(Texas Review Press, 2021) andSeparation Anxiety(CLASH Books, 2022).She writes about interspecies communication, plants & personhood, the filmic long take, the apocalypse, inherited trauma, and the Korean concept of han, and asks the question, how do we hold space open while maintaining intimacy? Incorporating shamanic and energetic healing, she teaches workshops on inherited trauma, healing and writing, and practices in several lineages, including the medicine tradition of the Q'ero, Zen Buddhism (in the tradition of Plum Village & Thich Nhat Hanh), and Korean shamanic ritual (Muism). She currently lives in Portland, OR where she is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Portland State University. janicel.com / Twitter, Instagram: @diddioz
PRAISE FOR JANICE LEE “Not only lingual sensitivity to the mystery of mystery but her courage in Separation Anxiety to probe uncertainty with aplomb, Janice Lee is that rare lingual artist having the courage to defy while engaging uncertainty and the brinksmanship that teems with anonymity. These are poems that reconnoiter their own dispossession.” —Will Alexander, author of The Combustion Cycle ""Simultaneously visionary in scope and distilled to the barest truth in language, Janice Lee’s Separation Anxiety journeys past death, opening to what always already was and to possibility. Notions of life, kinship, and love expand beyond species and the space-time continuum, transforming through encounter and relation. There’s an intimacy and directness in these poems that carries the reader tenderly through each revelation. Whispers from the cosmos, from beloveds, and from deep inside. You’ll want to meander in and revisit the world these poems build, seeing our own more sharply and with all its ghostings.” – Megan Kaminski, author of Gentle Women “Conjured and called to, companions, pets, ancestors, ideas, and the ever-multiplying evidence of the living, searching self inhabit the rooms of Separation Anxiety, each poem an entry—as in a daybook or book of hours, as in an entrance: of and into. What occurs in Janice Lee’s numbered sequence of seventy-seven poems is, somehow, everything: lyric, list, quiz, instruction, incantation, meditation; dogs, darkness, laughter, prophecy, ghosts, landscapes, the labor of worms. Simultaneously capacious and cohesive, this remarkable book invents a dimension equal parts medium and record.” — Lisa Olstein “In Separation Anxiety, we embark with the knowledge that ghosts contain an echo to listen for and intuition is a form of sight. Both an astute guide and a fellow wanderer in the liminal landscape of anticipatory grief, Janice Lee observes, ‘sometimes one must choose death/ not to run away from life.’ Living fully requires embracing transformation—of those we love and of ourselves. She admits, ‘it is brutal,’ but qualifies, ‘it being linear time.’ As we stop resisting mortality and linearity, we simultaneously transcend their illusion; ‘we will all go down these paths/ more than once.’ Navigating the territory of despair and denial without becoming consumed, Lee invites us to wake, forget, and wake again, to clear our vision and ‘look around/ rather than/ ahead.’” —Teresa K. Miller, National Poetry Series–winning author of Borderline Fortune ""Janice Lee's brilliance in fiction now enters poetry in this exploration of grief, love, and communication between species: human, dog, ghost. These poems are intimate as they are intellectual, full of wisdom as much as wonder. Lee makes meaning of living, dying, and the subtle, gorgeous surprise. I love this book. It makes language and the world feel new."" – Lee Herrick, author of Scar and Flower ""A delicate constellation of lives both human and not that keep threatening to come together to form meaning but then, with each new section, changes shape, continuing to open up. Imagine a Death is an illuminating exploration of radical intersubjectivity, the understanding that even though everyone and everything potentially can touch everything else, nothing accumulates with narrative neatness. Through brilliantly complex sentences, Lee offers a disjunctive synthesis on the multifold possibilities and fears of being."" – Brian Evenson, author of eilee “Janice Lee is a genius!” –Eileen Myles, author of Afterglow: A Dog Memoir