Categories for Bennu's Library
Click on Links to go to Book Lists
Eileen R. Tabios' Author Copies
Autobiographies, Biographies, Memoirs
Diaries, Journals, Correspondences
*
Selected Book Acquisition Notes As the Library Grows:
*
READINGS
Bennu /ˈbɛnuː/ is an ancient Egyptian deity linked with the Sun, creation, and rebirth. It may have been the original inspiration for the phoenix legends that developed in Greek mythology. Bennu's Library is a new library-in-progress to replace the Galatea Library destroyed by a California megawildfire. Since Galatea Library contained 15,516 books, Bennu's target is for at least the same number of books. Current Status: 1,300-1,400 books.
Categories for Bennu's Library
Click on Links to go to Book Lists
Eileen R. Tabios' Author Copies
Autobiographies, Biographies, Memoirs
Diaries, Journals, Correspondences
*
Selected Book Acquisition Notes As the Library Grows:
*
READINGS
FICTION
Behind The Blue Canvas, 2004
[Novel Chatelaine, 2009]
SILK EGG: Collected Novels 2009-2009, 2011
What Counts, 2020
PAGPAG: The Dictator’s Aftermath in the Diaspora, 2020
DOVELION: A Fairy Tale for Our Times, 2021
Simmering: a novella-in-prose-poems, 2022
Getting to One, flash fictions with art by harry k stammer, 2023
The Balikbayan Artist, 2024
POETRY
After The Egyptians Determined The Shape of the World Is A Circle, 1996
Beyond Life Sentences, 1998
[The Empty Flagpole (CD with guest artist Mei-mei Berssenbrugge), 2000]
Ecstatic Mutations (with short stories and essays), 2001
Reproductions of The Empty Flagpole, 2002
[Enheduanna in the 21st Century, 2002]
[There, Where the Pages Would End, 2003]
Menage a Trois With the 21st Century, 2004
Crucial Bliss Epilogues, 2004
The Estrus Gaze(s), 2005
[Songs of the Colon, 2005]
Post Bling Bling, 2005
I Take Thee, English, For My Beloved, 2005
The Secret Lives of Punctuations, Vol. I, 2006
Dredging for Atlantis, 2006
[It’s Curtains, 2006]
SILENCES: The Autobiography of Loss, 2007
[The Singer and Others: Flamenco Hay(na)ku, 2007]
The Light Sang As It Left Your Eyes: Our Autobiography, 2007
Nota Bene Eiswein, 2009
Footnotes to Algebra: Uncollected Poems 1995-2009, 2009
[On A Pyre: An Ars Poetica, 2010]
[Roman Holiday, 2010]
[Hay(na)ku for Haiti, 2010]
THE THORN ROSARY: Selected Prose Poems and New 1998-2010, 2010
the relational elations of ORPHANED ALGEBRA (with j/j hastain), 2012
5 Shades of Gray, 2012
THE AWAKENING: A Long Poem Triptych & A Poetics Fragment, 2013
147 Million Orphans (MMXI-MML), 2014
[44 RESURRECTIONS, 2014]
SUN STIGMATA (Sculpture Poems), 2014
I Forgot Light Burns, 2015
[Duende in the Alleys, 2015]
INVENT(ST)ORY: Selected Catalog Poems & New (1996-2015), 2015
The Connoisseur of Alleys, 2016
[The Gilded Age of Kickstarters, 2016]
[Excavating the Filipino in Me, 2016]
I Forgot Ars Poetica, 2016
AMNESIA: Somebody’s Memoir, 2016
THE OPPOSITE OF CLAUSTROPHOBIA: Prime’s Anti-Autobiography, 2017
[Post-Ecstasy Mutations, 2017]
[On Green Lawn, The Scent of White, 2017]
To Be An Empire Is To Burn, 2017
If They Hadn’t Worn White Hoods … (with John Bloomberg-Rissman), 2017
[What Shivering Monks Comprehend, 2017]
YOUR FATHER IS BALD: Selected Hay(na)ku Poems, 2017
IMMIGRANT: Hay(na)ku & Other Poems In A New Land, 2017
Comprehending Mortality (with John Bloomberg-Rissman), 2017
[Big City Cante Intermedio, 2017]
WINTER ON WALL STREET: A Novella-in-Verse, 2017
Making National Poetry Month Great Again, 2017
MANHATTAN: An Archaeology, 2017
Love In A Time of Belligerence, 2017
MURDER DEATH RESURRECTION: A Poetry Generator, 2018
TANKA, Vol. I, 2018
HIRAETH: Tercets From The Last Archipelago, 2018
One, Two, Three: Selected Hay(na)ku Poems (Trans. Rebeka Lembo), 2018
THE GREAT AMERICAN NOVEL: Selected Visual Poetry 2001-2019, 2019
The In(ter)vention of the Hay(na)ku: Selected Tercets 1996-2019, 2019 & 2021
Witness in the Convex Mirror, 2019
Evocare: Selected Tankas (with Ayo Gutierrez and Bianca Nagac), 2019
[We Are It, 2020]
Inculpatory Evidence: The Covid-19 Poems, 2020
Political Love, 2021
La Vie érotique de l’art, une séance avec William Carlos Williams (Trad. de l’anglais (États-Unis) par Samuel Rochery), 2021
PRISES (Trad. de l’anglais (États-Unis) par Fanny Garin), 2022
Because I Love You, I Become War, 2023
Drawing the Six Directions, 2024
Engkanto in the Diaspora, 2025
PROSE COLLECTIONS
Black Lightning: Poetry-In-Progress (poetry essays/interviews), 1998
My Romance (art essays with poems), 2002
The Blind Chatelaine’s Keys (biography with haybun), 2008
AGAINST MISANTHROPY: A Life in Poetry (2015-1995), 2015
#EileenWritesNovel, 2017
Tiny Stickers: A Covid-19 Autobiography, 2020
THE INVENTOR: A Poet’s Transcolonial Autobiography, 2023
__________
Books within brackets are not (yet) in the library. They are not in library mostly for two reasons: they are e-publications or their print copies were taken by the 2020 Glass Fire.
Under my hashtag eileenreadsbooks on Facebook, I occasionally place Notes to my acquisitions as the library progresses. Here are selections in reverse chronological order from January 1, 2024 which is when I began inputting them on this blog. To see older book acquisition Notes, go to Facebook and look up the hashtag. Acquisitions from July-September 2025 are HERE; April-June 2025 are HERE, Jan.-March 2025 are HERE, October-December 2024 are HERE, July-September 2024 are HERE, April-June 2024 are HERE, Jan.-March 2024 are HERE.
11/14/25
Mark Young is a treasure among contemporary poets, editors and publishers. He’s also witty. I just relished his new collection, FROM THE CAVE’S JUKEBOX, and post a prose poem example below. Thanks to Sandy Press for sending.
I’m also grateful to Ateneo de Manila Publishing for the Manolete Mora book, as well as Station Hill Press and John Godfrey for John’s latest, PRETTIER GRIT. I appreciate publishers and writers thinking I’m worthy of free books 😊
These and other books join my library-in-progress; I show latest acquisitions below. Some might wonder why I am buying old books. Apart from how good literature doesn’t expire, I am also acquiring to replace some books from my library that was burnt or smoked by a wildfire. With my library’s target of 15,516 books (a number that replicates the number of books lost to a wildfire), this latest crop means 1,389 books down, 14,127 books to go!
11/2/25
Just acquired a new addition to my collection of macrominiature books (books no larger than 4 inches): MOTHERDYING by avant garde artist Michael Lentz. It’s published by the wonderfully innovative Isolarii. I’m pleased to see that collection grow (also with the modern editions of Hanuman, another macrominiature book publisher). The Lentz, along with other recent acquisitions enter my library-in-progress. With the library’s target of 15,516 books (a number that replicates the number of books lost to a wildfire), that’s 1,380 books down, 14,136 books to go!
10/27/25
Reading over the past week has been fantastic. I’ve identified one of the top two favorite novels I will have read for 2025 (I know the year’s not yet over but it’s unlikely another novel will generate more enthusiasm from me). I’ve read 35 novels so far this year and the superb MODERATION by the brilliant Elaine Castillo—such a wide-ranging mind!—engaged me more than most for reasons that will appear in a future review. (I review books not based on what others assign but based simply on what I liked reading; I’m sad that I can’t review everything I like.)
In poetry, I was blessed to receive a copy of Burt Kimmelman’s new poetry book A Door, A Window. I always enjoy Burt’s minimal masterpieces; I post an image of my favorite poem from his book.
Burt’s and other recent acquisitions are of course welcome into my library-in-progress. With the library’s target of 15,516 books (a number that replicates the number of books lost to a wildfire), and with deducting one publication that was donated to a local Little Free Library, that’s 1,374 books down, 14,142 books to go!


10/13/25
I’m surrounded by understatements and the deadpan, including the Linda Ty-Casper memoir I’m reviewing and now these just-read books that look to join what will be among my Best Reads for 2025. Korean poet Oh Eun is new to me but clearly masterful; see his poem excerpt below with that wonderful image of piano playing and how that thumb and pinky become “limits to the expanding world.” I’ll show the back cover which describes well this collection of Shyun Ahn’s translations of Oh Eun’s poems. I also feature a brief excerpt from Scott MacLeod’s Shikataganai which refers to a Japanese philosophy of acceptance. Scott’s book is hard to excerpt and perhaps what I show doesn’t adequately manifest the charm, humor, and deceptive sense of effortlessness that the book as a whole creates—but it’s charmingly witty. I’m glad to have these books in my library.
So with said library’s target of 15,516 books (a number that replicates the number of books lost to a wildfire), that’s 1,367 books down, 14,149 books to go!
10/6/25
Received latest anthology to include one of my poems, the very timely THE NATURE OF OUR TIMES. It's also the third book I'm reading by/edited by Filipino authors to commemorate Filipino American History Month (FAHM). It'd be hard to highlight a particular poem from what's nearly a 400-page anthology, so my highlighted one is chosen for a personal reason. I show Paula J. Lambert's poem because it takes off from the idea of the weight of a soul. It's a concept so intriguing to me that it made it into my new novel GENESIS. Paula doesn't explain her reference (nor does she need to) but I'll share this excerpt from GENESIS because maybe others will find it interesting:
'... the word “soul” evoked Duncan MacDougall’s so-called “21 grams experiment.” In the early 1900s, the physician hypothesized that souls have physical weight, and attempted to measure the mass lost by a human when the soul departed the body. MacDougall identified six patients in nursing homes whose deaths were imminent... When the patients looked like they were close to death, their entire bed was placed on an industrial sized scale that was sensitive to within two tenths of an ounce or 5.6 grams. There were problems with measuring the mass change of six patients at the moment of death, for example insufficiently adjusted scales. But one of the six subjects lost three-quarters of an ounce, or 21.3 grams. While MacDougall said more testing was required before any conclusion, The New York Times broke the story about his experiment. The scientific community rejected MacDougall’s results but the concept of the soul having weight, in this case, 21 grams resonated enough to be popularized through movies (including “21 Grams” starring Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Danny Huston and Benicio Del Toro), songs, a television series, a documentary, and even an issue of the manga Gantz.'
I also share as an image below the first page of Phillip Levin's Foreword to THE NATURE OF OUR TIMES because the topic is important.
THE NATURE anthology, along with recently acquired books (thanks to latest gift-givers Aileen, Scott, harry, and my favorite Communist Sonny San Juan who sends JERUSALEM because it's a "latest hot spot"), goes to my personal library-in-progress. With its target of 15,516 books (a number that replicates the number of books lost to a wildfire), that’s 1,366 books down, 14,150 books to go!
Categories for Bennu's Library Click on Links to go to Book Lists Eileen R. Tabios' Author Copies Miniature Books Art Autobiographi...