Emmy Pérez is a Chicanx poet and writer originally from Santa Ana, California, United States. She was a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship in 2017.[1] She has lived in the borderlands of Texas since 2000, where she has taught creative writing in college and MFA programs, as well as in detention facilities and as part of social justice projects.[2] Her latest collective is Poets Against the Border Wall.[3] She was also a fellow (2010–12) and organizing committee member of CantoMundo (2018–19)[4] and is a long-time member of Macondo Writers Workshop.[5]
She is best known for her collections, With the River on Our Face and Solstice.[2]
She received the 2009 Alfredo Cisneros del Moral award for her writing, an award started by Sandra Cisneros.[6][7] Previously, she received the James D. Phelan Literary Award from the San Francisco Foundation.[4]
"The great talents of the 2019-2020 State Artists, along with all of those who were nominated, help contribute to a distinctive cultural identity that makes Texas a great place to live, work and visit. It is important that we celebrate the distinguished career achievements of these artists which have enhanced the lives of so many.”[13]
Pérez has written two books, With the River on Our Face and Solstice.[2]With the River on Our Face is a poetry collection book written about Texas' Southwest borderlands.[17][18] Each poem in the book talks about the life in the south borders of Texas along the Rio Grande Valley and how lives are affected by politics and global forces.[19]