Maya Phillips, in
American Poets, described the book as reflecting "a career of fiercely anti-colonialist, anti-xenophobic, feminist poems" and commended Chin for providing "a wealth of riches: jokes and puns; poems as blues songs, mythic allegories, or letters" drawing from multiple languages and cultural traditions. The
Kenyon Review lauded Chin's "audacious" range—describing her as "colloquial," "bawdy," "goofy," and "formally inventive"—and her ability to hold the nuances of both China and America in her poetics. The
South China Morning Post, called it "a poem-by-poem, line-by-line, image-by-image masterclass in formal play, allusion and wit" derived from "a prodigious career of poetry and advocacy." ==References==