Exodus

`

Exodus

‘Gbenga Adeoba
Foreword by Kwame Dawes

African Poetry Book Series

78 pages

Paperback

March 2020

978-1-4962-2117-9

$17.95 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

March 2020

978-1-4962-2180-3

$17.95 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

March 2020

978-1-4962-2182-7

$17.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

Winner of the Sillerman First Book Prize for African Poetry, ‘Gbenga Adeoba’s collection Exodus focuses on forms of migration due to the slave trade, war, natural disasters, and economic opportunities.
              
Using the sea as a source of language and metaphor, Adeoba explores themes of memory, transition, and the intersections between the historic and the imagined. With great tenderness and power his poetry of empathy searches for meaning in sharply constructed images, creating scenes of making and unmaking while he investigates experiences of exile and displacement across time and place.

Author Bio

‘Gbenga Adeoba is a graduate fellow at the University of Iowa. Born in Nigeria, he is the author of the chapbook Here Is Water, which appeared in the African Poetry Book Fund’s New-Generation African Poets Series. His work has been published in Oxford Poetry, Pleiades, Salamander, Poet Lore, African American Review, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere.
 

Praise

“There is both passion and beauty in Adeoba’s work, framed by what seems an acute sense of the power of language to capture reality. To capture and reveal truth, shrouded in all its scars, alive somehow with hope. History demands that images of drowning surge through Adeoba’s Exodus. The Mediterranean is ‘a grave wide enough for the numbers,’ we too ‘could become a band of unnamed migrants / found floating on the face of the sea,’ and ‘you could find trinket boxes or a girl’s / plastic doll in that rubble. . . . / The tiny things are heavier.’ Yet the poet can still imagine shorebirds’ songs ‘urging men to love again, calling / them to images craving tenderness.’ For poetry too is a tiny thing, and a heavy one.”—Alicia Ostriker, New York state poet laureate and author of Waiting for the Light
 

Table of Contents

Foreword, by Kwame Dawes    
Acknowledgments    
I
Resurrection    
Seafarers    
Nightshift at the Coast    
All the Little Lights Going Out    
Child of the World    
Thresholds    
Half Acre of Water    
Exodus    
Leaving Agadez    
Chorography    
A Funeral Hymn in Falsetto    
What Birds Sing of in Libya    
Middle Passage    
Eclipse    
Pa Cudjo Lewis Weaves a Song    
Desert Fathers    
A Short Essay on Drowning    
II
Noah
Here Is Water    
20, Gbogi Street    
Rain Choral    
Numbers    
The Morning After    
Gunfire    
War Notes    
Epitaphs    
Nightfall, Aleppo    
Kites        
Promenade    
Notes    

Also of Interest