Published: Feb. 17, 2023

event flyerJoin us for an extraordinary event, a book reading and dialogue with Tsering Yangzom Lama about her award-winning debut novel,ÌýWe Measure the Earth with Our Bodies.

°Â³ó±ð²Ô:ÌýThursday, March 2
5:30 Reception, Meet the Author | 6pm Book Reading and Dialogue

Where:ÌýChancellor’s Auditorium
CASE Building 4th Floor 725 Euclid Ave, CU Boulder

Breathtaking in scope and powerfully intimate,ÌýWe Measure the Earth with Our BodiesÌýis a gorgeously written meditation on colonization, displacement, and the lengths we’ll go to remain connected to our families and ancestral lands. Told through the lives of a family across three generations, this beautifully lyrical debut novel provides a nuanced portrait of the world of Tibetan exiles.ÌýWe Measure the Earth with Our Bodies, won the 2023 New Writers Award for Fiction from the Great Lakes Colleges Association. A New York Times Summer Reads pick, her novel was shortlisted for The Scotiabank Giller Prize and longlisted for The Center for Fiction First Novel Prize and The Toronto Book Awards.

“We Measure the Earth with Our BodiesÌýshowcases a writer of rare talent and uncompromising vision. In these pages that speak of exile and loss, of longing and sorrow, Tsering Lama also manages to remind us–with startling beauty and compassion – how much can still survive. This novel is a testament toÌýa people’s resolve to love, no matter what. A triumph.â€
—Maaza Mengiste, Booker Prize shortlisted author ofÌýThe Shadow King

“[A] heartfelt and magical saga of a Tibetan family’s love, sacrifice, and heritage … Lama imbues this mesmerizing tale—informed by her own family fleeing Tibet for Nepal in the 1960s—with a rich sense of history, mysticism, and ritual.â€Ìý—Publishers Weekly

Tsering Yangzom LamaÌýholds an MFA in Writing from Columbia University where she was a TOMS Fellow, Writing Fellow, and Teaching Fellow. She earned her BA in Creative Writing and International Relations from the University of British Columbia. A lifelong activist, she is a Storytelling Advisor at Greenpeace International, where she guides and trains people around the world in narrative strategy. A recipient of grants from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund, Tsering has been a resident at the Jan Michalski Foundation, Banff Center for Arts and Creativity, Hedgebrook, Willapa Bay AiR, Vermont Studio Center, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Lillian E. Smith Center, Art Omi, Catwalk Institute, WildAcres, and Playa Summerlake.ÌýShe was selected as a 2018ÌýTin HouseÌýNovel Scholar.ÌýTsering’s writing has appeared inÌýThe Globe and Mail,ÌýThe Malahat Review, Grain,ÌýKenyon Review,ÌýVela,ÌýLaLit, andÌýHimal SouthAsian, as well as the anthologiesÌýOld Demons New Deities: 21 Short Stories from Tibet;ÌýHouse of Snow: An Anthology of the Greatest Writing Â鶹ÊÓƵ Nepal;ÌýandÌýBrave New Play Rites.ÌýTsering is also a co-founder ofÌý, a leading English-language blog among Tibetan youth in exile. Born and raised in Nepal, she currently splits her time between Vancouver, Canada and Sweden.Ìý

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