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Asian American poet, California Poet Laureate (2022-2024), Fresno Poet Laureate (2015-2017), Fresno/San Joaquin Valley/Northern California, Poem “Truths” by Lee Herrick, Poetry Collection Scar and Flower by Lee Herrick

Official Author Photo by Curtis Messer
Source: The Poet’s Official Website
My Poetry Corner January 2025 features the poem “Truths” from the poetry collection Scar and Flower (USA, 2019) by poet Lee Herrick, the first Asian American to serve as the tenth California Poet Laureate (2022-2024). Born in 1970 in Daejeon, South Korea, he was adopted at ten months old by an American couple. He grew up in Northern California where he attended Modesto Junior College and received his BA in English and MA in Composition and Rhetoric from the California State University, Stanislaus.
He lives with his wife and daughter in Fresno, Northern California, where he is an English professor at Fresno City College since 1997. He also teaches in the low-residency MFA program at the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe.
“Adoption is seen through Hollywood’s lens as purely and essentially as a blessing and a gift. Which in some way may be true, however adoption is also wrapped in trauma,” Herrick told Sara Ohler during an interview in May 2023 for The Rampage literary magazine.
Though blessed with a warm and loving family, he was struck with anxiety in 1989, during his senior year in high school and throughout most of college. Growing up among family members in the creative arts—his mother is a visual artist—he found relief in music and poetry. “You kind of just had to make do or things weren’t very helpful,” Herrick said. “‘Handle your business or be a man,’ so the arts and music was a great outlet for me.”
“Adoption has offered me a heightened sense of race and difference and nuance,” Herrick told Rebecca Evans during their December 2018 interview for The Normal School Literary Magazine. “And being raised in a white family, I’m able to see people and the questions I grew up with about myself and the world. This gives me a true interest in individual experiences.”
He further added that his third book, Scar and Flower, finalist for the 2020 Northern California Book Award, is his first overtly political book. “My passion and long-standing interests in social justice merged with the events in the world. I found myself writing about guns and mass shootings, along with poems about my daughter, and walks along the beach. At some point, I realized, this is about balance. It was also about trauma, how people regulate the impact of life-altering events. How they navigate through and, eventually, reach the other side.”
Scar, the first section of the collection with 29 poems, is about mass shootings, like Newtown, the topic of his poem “What I Hear After the Massacre and What I Mistake For My Heart” (p. 14). On December 14, 2012, twenty-year-old Adam Lanza shot and killed 20 children between six and seven years old, and six adult staff members at the Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Invisible birds shocked out of the trees
and you mistake them for children
on the playground, or you mistake the leaves
cracked underfoot for the children’s hush
or broken glass. It’s a maelstrom.
At the Winter Program, the first graders
sing “Let It Snow” and the parents clasp
their hands, half exhale, half prayer.
The children sing in your town and you
think of the children in the shattered town.
All that comes to you is their hearts, heaven,
hell, and the next kind word you will say to a boy.
In “Fatigue” (p. 18), the poet expresses my own frustration and shared pain with our unwillingness and inability to end gun violence across our nation. Why? Why? Why?
The mother cries into her black tea. / The mother weeds in the small yard.
The father cries into his old tea, / tries to bring his son back to life, wonders
why again, why the gun, why the cop, / why the fire, where’s the rain,
why the gun, why the gun, / why the hole, in the head, in the dream
why theater, why the school grounds, / why headline, why sonnet,
why ammunition, why the acquittal, / why the killer can’t hear the doves
why the boy cannot run with a hood / why some men craft hate with theirs
why again, why the gun, why the cop / where’s the out, where’s the cry
why the tie, why the tale, / why the black, why the brown,
why again, why we die, / why the sun go down like this.
In the poem “Rose” (p. 20), the scar and flower become one. At the New York Botanical Garden, the poet remembers Orlando, Florida, where 29-year-old Omar Mateen, on June 12, 2016, shot and killed 49 people and wounded 53 more in a mass shooting at Pulse, a gay nightclub.
Tell me, rose, about root, soil, wilt. / I’m stealing a petal, and I know it’s a crime. I want the petal to fly from this botanical / garden to Orlando, where I cannot place a rose / on any altar but where I imagine forty-nine roses / near a swamp in a park where even small children know, don’t terrorize the birds! Let no person deliver / terror in a park, in a school, in a dance club, no / terror in a dance club. I want to be quiet. / The roses admit they don’t know why they bloom. / But they do. The rose, its pulse, doing its loveliness / in a time of disaster, dancing like the world was on fire.
The featured 26-verse poem “Truths” (pp. 63-64) is from the second section Flower, comprised of 22 poems. Herrick opens this poem with an epigraph from the American poet Philip Levine (1928-2015) who taught for more than thirty years in the English Department of California State University, Fresno: “Some things you know all your life. They are so simple and true, they must be said without elegance.” With his gracious vision of the world, Herrick brings Levine’s insight into our individual and shared experiences.
In these times of a post-truth world, where misinformation and disinformation assail us on all sides, it is of vital importance that we do not lose sight of these simple truths that we all share and experience as humans.
I will say it like this: I watched my daughter bite into a peach,
and although she did not have the language for it yet,
I imagined her thinking, that taste, that perfect juice,
is heavenly. There was a certain light in Fresno that day,
like today, where we work and dream—
Mayor and mothers, farmers and fathers, laborers
in blue collars and donors for the red wave,
one city of multiple truths straight down the 99
dreaming about the perfect peach, the perfect pitch,
one city in the shape of an immigrant’s beautiful accent,
one city of taco, gyro, pan dulce, and strawberries
so good, you’d swear they came straight from the hand of God,
one city, in my dream, where there are no gunshots tonight…
Fresno, located in the San Joaquin Valley of California, is the largest city in the greater Central Valley region of large-scale production of diverse crops, including grains, vegetables, fruits, and nuts. It’s the fifth most-populous city in California, with the third-largest Hispanic/Latino population in the United States. It is also home to minority Armenian and Hmong (East Asian) communities. The city sits at the junction of Highways 41 and 99 that link the city with the Yosemite National Park and other urban centers of the region.
[...] My truths involve dreams,
stars, hard work and good pay for the ice worker, the tractor
driver, the backyard gardener, the students and the teachers,
the nurses and the preachers. The fog on a country road—
that is the truth. Our menacing heat in July—truth.
My city is your city, a bead of sweat and the will
to work, the want for clean air, for water,
for a moment of grace in the shade.
To read the complete featured poem and learn more about the work of Korean American poet Lee Herrick, go to my Poetry Corner January 2025.
Clearly an important poet. I did follow your link, hoping to see samples of his work on adoption – just because of my background profession
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Thanks very much for your interest, Derrick. In 2023, he co-edited Afterlives: An AGNI Portfolio of Asian Adoptee Diaspora Writing. You can learn more at the link below:
https://agnionline.bu.edu/portfolio/afterlives/
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Wow, who would’ve guessed that poetry could change the world? This is definitely a good example of that; such powerful words, well told. Thanks for the wonderful intro to Lee Herrick’s poetry. 🌸📚😊
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My pleasure, Ada 🙂 Great poetry can change lives and even influence the wider population. For this reason, authoritarian governments number them among the opposition for silencing, disappearance, imprisonment, and death.
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Beautiful. Thank you for sharing, Rosaliene, and introducing me to Lee Herrick.
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You’re welcome, Madeline 🙂
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Hi. You’ve brought him to wider attention. I like the way he writes. I hadn’t heard of him before.
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Neil, I’m so glad that you like Herrick’s poetic style.
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An impressive body of work for one so young. He creates powerful images in his work. Have a great Sunday Rosaliene. Allan
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So glad that you like his work, Allan 🙂 A great Sunday to you, too!
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Lee Herrick writes excellent, powerful poetry, Rosaliene. Thank you for discussing and excerpting his work.
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My pleasure, Dave 🙂 Our governor did well in appointing him as our poet laureate.
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Yes, a great choice!
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His poetry hits home. The why’s. We have heard so many excuses for so long, and when we ask “why not?” we are met with anger. They see it as righteous anger, protecting their right to bear arms, and their lack of empathy and smirking all communal responsibility sickens our souls to the point of forced acceptance. We are forced to accept the status quote, not to question it, or we become an enemy within, so the only way to express the horror is to do so through poetry and art.
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It’s such a frustrating situation, Tamara 😦 I thought that Sandy Hook would’ve been a wake-up call. But, again, No.
Each of Herrick’s 29 poems about our mass shootings brings the horror, as well as the scars, to life.
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There was a brief moment when it looked like Sandy Hook could have made a big change, but the conspiracy theorists got hold of it and blew that hope away. There’s too much money being made to ruin the mass killing industry, for that’s what it has become.
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Tamara, it’s truly tragic that those who profit from the gun industry dictate the narrative for our lives.
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I agree. We live in a hyper capitalistic society here, and that’s one of the unfortunate outcomes.
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What a gift he has to create such powerful images with his words. Thanks for the introduction.
I was wondering how you are doing in these fires? I don’t know where in California you live, but I’m glad to see you posting to mean you weren’t affected. Maggie
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You’re welcome, Maggie. Herrick is, indeed, a master at creating powerful images.
I live in Los Angeles County, neighboring Santa Monica and Hollywood. Never before has the wildfires come so close to our city limits. It was so scary and unsettling that I was unable to focus on writing a post for publication last Sunday.
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I bet, glad to hear you are safe.
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Thanks very much, Maggie. For now, calm is restored until the next wildfire.
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Thanks for sharing Lee Herrick’s beautiful poetry, Rosaliene. The verse about the perfect peach reminded me of a photo I saw somewhere today taken in Gaza, a land reduced to rubble, of a girl picking some kind of orange fruit from a tree. I couldn’t believe there could be such beauty in such a war torn place. It was like the perfect peach we’re all looking for.
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My pleasure, Mara 🙂 We take the simple beauty of our trees and fruits for granted. Until wars, wildfires, and other natural disasters rob us of their delight.
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Thank you for informing us about this artist, Rosaliene. I especially liked the description of his daughter eating a peach.
Herrick certainly has turned the trauma of his infancy into a life of truth-telling and writing about sheer beauty; two things sorely needed in the post-truth world we live in now. May his work be of comfort but also guidance and inspiration in the coming days, weeks, years.
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You’re welcome, Steve. I think we can all relate to savoring the sweetness of our favorite fruit 🙂
With regards to writing through trauma, here’s Herrick’s response to Rebecca Evans about where a poem begins and small ignited fire he talks about in his poetry workshops:
“I have this belief that writers, those who write seriously, have some experience in their life that altered their course, often under the age of ten, often traumatic or very difficult. I call that the writer’s fire. It is always there. Given that, then almost anything can spark from it…. It fuels their writing. My adoption is my large fire…”
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Ah, yes, that makes a lot of sense. Thank you for sharing that quote, Rosaliene. Very helpful.
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You’re welcome, Steve.
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Scar and Flower is a beautiful and poignant title; his poetry reflects both qualities and much more. Thank you for sharing, Rosaliene. 🌼
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My pleasure, Michele. Thanks for reading 🙂
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You’re welcome. Thank you! 🤓
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An important voice. Thank you, Rosaliene. “Fatigue” was too true. I think of my grandchildren as others think of those they love.
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My pleasure, Dr. Stein. It truly makes no sense to me that our right to bear arms overrides our right to life.
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Thank you for sharing. All heart breaking situations. We read about them in the papers. Violence never ends .
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Lakshmi, thanks for dropping by 🙂 It is, indeed, sadly true that violence never ends.
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Evocative and emotional poems, thanks for sharing, Rose. I also love your commentary: In these times of a post-truth world, where misinformation and disinformation assail us on all sides, it is of vital importance that we do not lose sight of these simple truths that we all share and experience as humans.
Today of all days — when 47 takes the helm again — we need to remember that.
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Pam, I’m glad that Herrick’s poems touch your heart. Thanks for your kind comment. Our shared humanity will be truly tested in the coming days and months. May our better angels triumph, as I witnessed in the generous response towards the survivors of the Palisades and Eaton Fires here in Los Angeles County.
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Thank you for introducing us to this passionate poet, Rosaliene. His words are deep and heartfelt.
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My pleasure, Mary. So glad that his poetry also touches you 🙂
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I’m thankful Lee Herrick keeps asking the questions about gun violence with so much compassion. why the killer can’t hear the doves is something I often wonder… and why does this keep happening? I am also thankful for his writing about the possibility of how good things can be and the love he has for his city.
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I wish I knew the answer, JoAnna. The greed of the gun lobby is only a part of the story.
I was drawn to the featured poem for that very reason: the good things that enrich our lives. His love for Fresno does, indeed, shine through.
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Powerful poems about gun violence. Glad Herrick is using his voice to protest these tragedies.
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Rebecca, it’s tragic that his poems, published in 2019, are still relevant. Happy the day when gun lovers wake up to their folly!
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Well, in the constitution I think the founders were talking about muskets and rifles, rather than weapons that are more like machine guns.
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Rebecca, it’s crazy! I’m sure the framers of the constitution knew that there would be need for amendments in a future, yet unknown and unimaginable to them.
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My dear Rosaliene, thank you so much for introducing us to such a deep and passionate poet as Lee Herrick. He touches on topics such as the trauma and impact of adoption and gun violence that pierces our spirit and touches us so passionately. 🙏🏼 Thank you so much my friend for sharing a poet laureate so deserving of the position! 🤗💖😊
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My pleasure, Kym 🙂 I’m glad that Herrick’s poetry has also touched you ❤
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You’re so very welcome my dear Sistah! Herrick’s poetry resonated with my. I appreciate your share! 😍🙏🏼😘
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🙂 ❤
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Wow. The power of art and music. I read an article about a young man whose therapist had a guitar in the room. The young man didn’t talk much, but he wound up picking up the guitar. He learned to play and was in a successful band for a long time. Art is such a gift for the soul. Blessings on both these men.
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Thanks very much, Ilsa. Each one of the creative arts is, indeed, a gift for the soul. As an adolescent living with warring parents during turbulent political times, I found refuge in both art and music.
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❤
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Powerful and moving! 🙏
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So glad you like Herrick’s poetry, MM.
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I can’t wait to get my copy of Scar and Flower tomorrow! 🙏🏿
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Shonda, thanks for dropping by 🙂 It’s an excellent poetry collection.
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