Chris Tse

Chris Tse
“I feel as if we are
collectively haunted by some outdated expression
of freedom because the day is a dream we dream
when we have no other way to take flight.”
-from: Subtitles missing
Chris Tse is a poet, editor, and writer, and the current poet laureate of New Zealand (2022-2025).
Tse studied film and English literature before obtaining an MA in creative writing from the International Institute of Modern Letters. He began writing as a teenager and reports to have been inspired by the previous Poet Laureates of his country. Therefore, he aims to use his platform as current Poet Laureate to move poetry into the mainstream, engaging especially younger people.
His first poetry collection How to be Dead in a Year of Snakes (2014), which recounts the racially motivated murder of Chinese miner Joe Kum Yung in 1905, won the Jessie Mackay Award for Best First Book of Poetry in 2016. While his own heritage and the Chinese experience in New Zealand are central to much of his work, another aspect of his identity, his queerness, comes to the foreground in his poetry collections HE’S SO MASC (2018) and Super Model Minority (2022), which was a finalist at the 2023 Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry. These more recent publications take the reader through the ups and downs of modern-, urban-, queer- and nightlife.
Tse’s work has been published in several magazines, such as Landfall, which described his poetry as curious and original. Furthermore, he co-edited Out Here: An Anthology of Takatāpui and LGBTQIA+ Writers from Aotearoa (2021), the first major anthology comprising poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction by queer Aotearoa writers. Tse was a fellow of the International Writing Program’s Fall Residency at the University of Iowa in 2024 and is a founding member of the poetry collective Show Ponies.
Sponsors













