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'Expect to be heartbroken' Elle 'Its ending brought me close to
tears' Beth O'Leary, author of The Flatshare 'Ever fallen in love
with messy, confusing consequences for everyone involved? Then Good
Intentions is for you' Stylist An unforgettable debut novel about
first love, family obligation and finding your way. As Nur's family
counts down to midnight on New Year's Eve, Nur is watching the
clock more closely than most: he has made a pact with himself, and
with his girlfriend, Yasmina, that at midnight he will finally tell
his Pakistani parents the truth. That he has built a life with a
woman he loves and she is Black. Nur wants to be the good son his
parents ask him to be, and the good boyfriend Yasmina needs him to
be. But as everything he holds dear is challenged, he is forced to
ask, is love really a choice for a second-generation immigrant son
like him? 'This powerful story will stay with me for a very long
time' Louise O'Neill, author of Idol 'Addictive in every sense'
Irenosen Okojie, author of Nudibranch 'An emotional ride through
the highs, lows, and inescapable truths of modern love' Justin
Myers, author of The Fake-Up 'Sensitive . . . Absorbingly honest'
Diana Evans, author of Ordinary People 'A magnificent and messy
love story that broke my heart' Huma Qureshi, author of How We Met
An Outside Magazine Favorite Book of 2021 A Book Riot Best Book of
2021 A Shelf Awareness Best Book of 2021 "Places do not belong to
us. We belong to them." The child of South Asian migrants, Kazim
Ali was born in London, lived as a child in the cities and small
towns of Manitoba, and made a life in the United States. As a man
passing through disparate homes, he has never felt he belonged to a
place. And yet, one day, the celebrated poet and essayist finds
himself thinking of the boreal forests and lush waterways of
Jenpeg, a community thrown up around the building of a
hydroelectric dam on the Nelson River, where he once lived for
several years as a child. Does the town still exist, he wonders? Is
the dam still operational? When Ali goes searching, however, he
finds not news of Jenpeg, but of the local Pimicikamak community.
Facing environmental destruction and broken promises from the
Canadian government, they have evicted Manitoba's electric utility
from the dam on Cross Lake. In a place where water is an integral
part of social and cultural life, the community demands
accountability for the harm that the utility has caused. Troubled,
Ali returns north, looking to understand his place in this story
and eager to listen. Over the course of a week, he participates in
community life, speaks with Elders and community members, and
learns about the politics of the dam from Chief Cathy Merrick. He
drinks tea with activists, eats corned beef hash with the Chief,
and learns about the history of the dam, built on land that was
never ceded, and Jenpeg, a town that now exists mostly in his
memory. In building relationships with his former neighbors, Ali
explores questions of land and power and in remembering a lost
connection to this place, finally finds a home he might belong to.
The Oasis of Now is the first U.S. book publication of the works of
Sohrab Sepehri (1928 1980), one of the major Iranian poets of the
twentieth century. Well-versed in Buddhism, mysticism, and Western
traditions, Sepehri mingled Western concepts with Eastern ones,
creating a poetry unsurpassed in the history of Persian literature.
In Iran, his Persian verses are often recited in public gatherings
and lines from them were used as slogans by the protesters in 2009.
This first full-length American volume collects poems from three of
Sepehri's most important books, including the highly acclaimed
Water's Footfall. I want to know: Why is a horse noble and the dove
beloved but no one keeps a pet vulture in a gilded cage. Why is the
humble clover trodden upon rather than the red tulip. I want to see
anew and wash the words of the world in wind and rain. Sohrab
Sepehri wrote the poems collected in The Oasis of Now after
traveling through Japan, China, and India, where he was exposed to
the arts of those countries as well as the spiritual disciplines of
Buddhism, Taoism, and Hinduism. This book is crucial for anyone
interested in Iranian arts and culture. Kazim Ali is author of ten
books of poetry, fiction, essays, and translations. He is an
associate professor at Oberlin College and founding editor of
Nightboat Books. Mohammad Jafar Mahallati is Presidential Scholar
in the religion department of Oberlin College. He served as Iran's
ambassador to the United Nations from 1987 to 1989 and was
instrumental in brokering a peace agreement between Iran and Iraq
during that time.
From the Bible to the Quaraan, the fortieth day symbolizes the last
moment before deliverance, a moment in time when a supplicant or
prophet or stormbeaten passenger knows there is no state after, but
finally accepts the present state as a permanent one. In The
Fortieth Day, Kazim Ali follows the fractured narratives and moving
lyrics of his debut collection, The Far Mosque, with a deeply
spiritual and meditative book exploring the rhetoric of prayer.
Kazim Ali was born in the United Kingdom and raised in an Islamic
household. He holds degrees from the University at Albany and New
York University. He lives in Oberlin, Ohio.
'Expect to be heartbroken' Elle 'One of the most eagerly awaited
debuts of 2022' Sunday Times 'Its ending brought me close to tears'
Beth O'Leary, author of The Flatshare 'Ever fallen in love with
messy, confusing consequences for everyone involved? Then Good
Intentions is for you' Stylist An unforgettable debut novel about
first love, family obligation and finding your way. As Nur's family
counts down to midnight on New Year's Eve, Nur is watching the
clock more closely than most: he has made a pact with himself, and
with his girlfriend, Yasmina, that at midnight he will finally tell
his Pakistani parents the truth. That he has built a life with a
woman he loves and she is Black. Nur wants to be the good son his
parents ask him to be, and the good boyfriend Yasmina needs him to
be. But as everything he holds dear is challenged, he is forced to
ask, is love really a choice for a second-generation immigrant son
like him? 'This powerful story will stay with me for a very long
time' Louise O'Neill, author of Idol 'Addictive in every sense'
Irenosen Okojie, author of Nudibranch 'An emotional ride through
the highs, lows, and inescapable truths of modern love' Justin
Myers, author of The Fake-Up 'Sensitive . . . Absorbingly honest'
Diana Evans, author of Ordinary People 'A magnificent and messy
love story that broke my heart' Huma Qureshi, author of How We Met
""The Far Mosque" by Kazim Ali is a book in which the author has
managed to render into the English language the universal inner
voice. These poems talk to the reader from the realm in which we
are all human. What a poet to be able to define spirit using the
American vocabulary! These poems, so very different from my own,
speak clearly to me. What a gift!"-Lucille Clifton
These gently fragmented narrative lyrics pursue enlightenment in
long, elegant yet plain-spoken, dark yet ecstatic lines. Ali
travels by water and by night, seeking the Far Mosque and its
overarching paradox: that when God and Self are one, an ascent into
Heaven is a voyage within.
"Still Life with Vase and Music"
"Four red boats clack against each other softly, lashed to the
dock.
A vase is meant to hold, not to unravel."
"Each tow-rope is a thread. Each thread is a chance to
weave."
The vase gives form to emptiness, as music does to silence.
"At the poet's tomb in Kashmir supplicants tie green
threads
around the bars to achieve the fulfillment of their prayers."
"I do not want to return home without that which I came
for.
"The poet was here-but he's gone now-you've missed him.""
"The river turns three times on the journey home.
I tie the thread around my own wrist bone."
Kazim Ali lives in New York's Hudson Valley, where he is
co-editor of Nightboat Books and an assistant professor of liberal
arts at The Culinary Institute of America. He received his MFA from
New York University and is the author of a novel, "Quinn's Passage"
(BlazeVox Books). His poetry has been published in "The Colorado
Review," "Hayden's Ferry Review," "Rattapallax," and elsewhere.
Nightboat Books is proud to bring back this long out-of-print
ecstatic, collaborative performative work. Written and arranged in
an experimental mode akin to music or choreography, these
fragmented lyrics create space and resonance honoring the physical
splendor of both the body and the poem. This new edition includes
several new poetic sequences and an extended essay.
A poetic, autobiographical collection from famed Mauritian writer
Ananda Devi, engaging with loneliness, desire, violence, and aging.
"I'm sick of biting off and chewing this dust, of scratching with
my thin claws, searching for some chunk of literary gold to hell
with all the disarrayed images of our homelands reflections of our
particular misery." From eminent Mauritian writer Ananda Devi, a
collection that transgresses genre lines with poetic,
autobiographical flow. The pieces herein address the resonance of
personal memories and regrets, the political world, and sexuality.
In light of the complexity of human identity, Devi emphasizes the
importance of each word chosen, speaking directly to the reader and
asking them to "peel back my skin. Unclothe me of myself."
Kazim Ali introduces five autofiction novellas by Kristjana
Gunnars-available in the U.S. for the first time, in a single,
handsome volume Between the late eighties and late nineties,
Kristjana Gunnars published five transgeneric novels comprised of a
scintillating blend of fiction, autobiography, literary theory, and
philosophy. Elusive and poetic... rigorous yet passionate...these
books were treasured by a devoted readership and have been lauded
by critics throughout the years since. - Kazim Ali, from the
introduction From a childhood in Cold War Iceland to love affairs
and deaths, these short works document a life of perpetual motion,
told a discontinuous, subversive style to reflect the singular,
feminist, nomadic life of the narrator. It is a life of thought, an
ongoing engagement with writers from Proust to Kierkegaard to
Kristeva, seeking and often finding a companionship in the writing
of others. These five spellbinding narratives act as a bending bow,
open to what life has to offer day by day and taking the gentler
course, wherein nothing is forced and life's big questions remain
beautifully unanswered. The Prowler is a reminiscence of childhood
spent in Iceland, seen from a distance with the Cold War as a
backdrop, just before the hyper-modernization of the mid-sixties,
when the air of the past was still discernible. When an orange was
a delicacy against the darkness. This is Gunnars' most lauded
novella. Zero Hour is a contemplation and remembrance of the
narrator's father and his death. The narrative traces the course of
the father's illness and final moments, and confronts the reality
and grief of absolute endings. The Substance of Forgetting is
ultimately about happiness. Set in a lush valley in central B.C.,
the narrator begins to awaken to possibilities of love and
transcendence. The Rose Garden is set in Germany and the narrator
is on an academic exchange wherein all that happens are things that
are not supposed to happen. Night Train to Nykobing is a darker
exploration of life's (and love's) unknowns and the dangers
inherent in choices we make. The narrator is travelling between
Vancouver and Oslo in a continuous back and forth that gives rise
to a sense of the liminality of life itself. "The intimacy, grace,
and intelligence of these narratives is remarkable. The mystery and
quietude honours the beauty of the everyday as it passes, while
simultaneously gesturing to vast other worlds. Often I was taken by
its openings and distances, and a marvellous, almost translucent
quality that permeates the texts. Oddly, at times it felt as if I
were inside a whispering many-chambered shell - resonant, enclosed,
pearlescent - the pleasure afforded, enormous." - Carole Maso,
author of Ghost Dance "From 1989 to 1998, the Icelandic-Canadian
writer Kristjana Gunnars published five novellas, each detailing
specific moments in the writer's life. Gathered here for the first
time, they offer a significant new strand of thinking about the
rise of autofiction and the history of innovative women's writing
in Canada. If you loved discovering Annie Ernaux, you'll love
discovering Kristjana Gunnars." - Sina Queyras, author of Lemon
Hound
A Book Riot and Shelf Awareness "Best Book of 2021 "Places do not
belong to us. We belong to them." The child of South Asian
migrants, Kazim Ali was born in London, lived as a child in the
cities and small towns of Manitoba, and made a life in the United
States. As a man passing through disparate homes, he has never felt
he belonged to a place. And yet, one day, the celebrated poet and
essayist finds himself thinking of the boreal forests and lush
waterways of Jenpeg, a community thrown up around the building of a
hydroelectric dam on the Nelson River, where he once lived for
several years as a child. Does the town still exist, he wonders? Is
the dam still operational? When Ali goes searching, however, he
finds not news of Jenpeg, but of the local Pimicikamak community.
Facing environmental destruction and broken promises from the
Canadian government, they have evicted Manitoba's electric utility
from the dam on Cross Lake. In a place where water is an integral
part of social and cultural life, the community demands
accountability for the harm that the utility has caused. Troubled,
Ali returns north, looking to understand his place in this story
and eager to listen. Over the course of a week, he participates in
community life, speaks with Elders and community members, and
learns about the politics of the dam from Chief Cathy Merrick. He
drinks tea with activists, eats corned beef hash with the Chief,
and learns about the history of the dam, built on land that was
never ceded, and Jenpeg, a town that now exists mostly in his
memory. In building relationships with his former neighbors, Ali
explores questions of land and power and in remembering a lost
connection to this place, finally finds a home he might belong to.
From the Introduction: "The goal with this anthology is to
represent that full range of contemporary expressions of Islam, as
well as a full range of genres-poetry, fiction, essay, memoir,
political writing, cultural writing, and of course plenty of texts
which mix and match and blur all of these modes . . . the
trajectories between the pieces-like that of kismet-will be
multiple, nonlinear, abstract. The Muslim community is plural and
contradictory. This collection of voices ought to be symphony and
cacophony at once, like the body of Muslims as they are
today."-Kazim Ali
To go without food from dawn to dusk for the whole month of Ramadan
- how does this feel? What do we become when we deny our major
appetites during the hours of daylight, and in what ways does this
transform the nights? In these absences, what new presences, what
illuminations and revelations arise? After many years of not
practicing, acclaimed writer Kazim Ali has re-embraced the Ramadan
tradition, and he brings a poet's precision and ardor to these
brilliant meditations on an ancient and yet entirely contemporary
ritual. Jane Hirshfield has said, "Kazim Ali - a writer whose
powers astonish in everything he puts pen to - has made in FASTING
FOR RAMADAN a book that is hybrid, peregrine, and deeply, quietly
revelatory. Ali's meditations on the month-long ritual fast unfold,
across cultures and spiritual practices, the deep meaning of a
chosen foregoing. These journal-born pages are both intimate and
public, at once ecumenical, particular, daily, and eloquently
learned; planted on the deep roots of tradition, they breathe this
moment's air. Is it possible for a work to be at once modest and an
undeniable tour de force? This book proves: it is."
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