5/24/2023 The Nomads, My Brothers, Go Out to Drink from the Big Dipper by Abdourahman A. WaberiRead Now![]() ![]() ![]() More than a few, though, will be glad to find the unity of place and feeling, "native soil/ between fig trees and loose stones" where "the dog of my deepest self/ is there/ curled on the ground." (Apr. ![]() The Koranic story of Bilal recurs as a myth of national origin the poet asks us to "let nomadic words live," with "oral ancestors' shadow/ resisting harsh winters." Sometimes Waberi returns to the landscape: "my tree the aloe/ my flower the crack in the cactus/ my river none in my land." But his verse, in its trim stanzas and its thin lists, insists on its modernity too: "for miniature republic/ parsimonious poems." Carlson's translation sounds spare and clear, though not always distinctive: few readers will cherish the English for the style alone. His terse sequences incorporate the region's recent troubles with civil wars and Islamic extremists ("the Somali bullet: bloom of a new genus/ that bans/ all transports of joy") along with ancient fable and history. Waberi (Author), Nancy Naomi Carlson (Translator) 3 ratings See all formats and editions Hardcover 21.00 3 Used from 10.43 5 New from 16.59 Paperback 21.28 4 New from 21. Novelist Waberi, the best-known contemporary writer from the East African nation of Djibouti, evokes "an entire life in the echo of my tongue" in his first collection of poems. The Nomads, My Brothers, Go Out to Drink from the Big Dipper (The Africa List) Hardcover by Abdourahman A. ![]()
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