“Hedgie’s poems treat our lives with the disrespect they deserve.” - Jackson Holbert “Meet Hedgie Choi, in Salvage, lurking like someone with blue hair, using droll commentary and humor to confront poetry’s great subjects—love, death, and mystery: ‘I am afraid of mystery / but by Mystery I was made / to be afraid.’ These poems thrill with deceptive simplicity, subversion, and candor, jolted by biting critiques of culture, in a tone as accessible as it is original. She writes, for example, with a wink and a nod, ‘I’m too afraid of pain to eat Chinese food / under five dollars. I’m going to live forever.’ I hope she does.” - Jane Miller