An award-winning author of numerous books, Chris Abani moves between
his Igbo ancestry and migration to the United States in poems that evoke
the holiness of grief through the startling, central practice of
inhaling an immolated Bible.
Smoking the Bible is an arresting collection of poems thick with
feeling, shaped by Chris Abani's astounding command of form and
metaphor. These poems reveal the personal story of two brothers--one
elegizing the other--and the larger story of a man in exile: exile of
geography, culture, and memory. What we experience in this emotionally
generous collection is a deep spiritual reckoning that draws on ancient
African traditions of belief, and an intellectual vivacity drawing on
various wisdom literatures and traditions. Abani illustrates the
connective geography between harm, regret, and release, as poems move
through landscapes of Nigeria, the Midwestern United States, adulthood,
and childhood. One has the sense of entering a whole and complex world
of the imagination in reading this collection. There is no artifice
here, no affectation; and these poems are a study in the very grace of
image.