Description

Book Synopsis
In her dedication Safia Elhillo writes, “The January Children are the generation born in Sudan under British occupation, where children were assigned birth years by height, all given the birth date January 1.” What follows is a deeply personal collection of poems that describe the experience of navigating the postcolonial world as a stranger in one's own land.

Trade Review
"A taut debut collection of heartfelt poems."—Publishers Weekly
"Safia Elhillo's triumph is not that she sings about novel love and heartbreak, but that she does so in an unforgettable voice."—Irene Mathieu, Muzzle
"Safia Elhillo’s The January Children offers the reader a galaxy of Sudanese voices engaging individual and collective memory in a manner that not only introduces readers to the nuances that animate that ancient land of layered diversity, which lends this collection a collage-like quality that is as sublime in its coherence as it is revelatory in its execution."—Post No Ills Magazine
“The first sound of what will be a remarkable noise in African poetry. Safia Elhillo has already laid out in this collection a complex foundation for a rich and complex body of work. What is unmistakable is her authority as a poet—she writes with great control and economy, but also with a vulnerability that is deeply engaging. Above all, her poems are filled with delight—a quality of humor that is never trite but always honest and insightful.”—from the foreword by Kwame Dawes

Table of Contents
Foreword by Kwame Dawes
Acknowledgments
asmarani makes prayer
vocabulary
Sudan Today. Nairobi: University of Africa, 1971. Print.
to make use of water
[did our mothers invent loneliness or . . . ]
while being escorted from the abdelhalim hafez concert
application for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
abdelhalim hafez asks for references
talking with an accent about home
origin stories
a brief history of silence
the last time marvin gaye was heard in the sudan
first interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
the lovers
talking with an accent about home
first adornment
callback interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
bride price
old wives’ tales
date night with abdelhalim hafez
first quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
self-portrait with dirty hair
watching arab idol with abdelhalim hafez
self-portrait with the question of race
second date
abdelhalim hafez wants to see other people
red moon night
self-portrait with yellow dress
others
alternate ending
[& what is a country but the drawing . . . .]
late-night phone call with abdelhalim hafez
republic of the sudan / ministry of interior / passport & immigration general directorate / alien from sudanese origin passcard
talking with an accent about home
talking with an accent about home (second take)
second quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
portrait with asylum
talking to boys about abdelhalim hafez at parties
biopic containing lies about abdelhalim hafez
asmarani does psychogeography
why abdelhalim
self-portrait with lake nasser
abdelhalim hafez asks who the sudanese are
the part i keep forgetting
talking with an accent about home (reprise)
third quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
final interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
self-portrait as abdelhalim hafez’s girl
portrait with abdelhalim hafez with the question of race
lovers’ quarrel with abdelhalim hafez
portrait of abdelhalim hafez as orpheus
glossary
everything i know about abdelhalim hafez
notes

The January Children

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    A Paperback / softback by Safia Elhillo, Kwame Dawes

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      Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
      Publication Date: 01/03/2017
      ISBN13: 9780803295988, 978-0803295988
      ISBN10: 0803295987

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In her dedication Safia Elhillo writes, “The January Children are the generation born in Sudan under British occupation, where children were assigned birth years by height, all given the birth date January 1.” What follows is a deeply personal collection of poems that describe the experience of navigating the postcolonial world as a stranger in one's own land.

      Trade Review
      "A taut debut collection of heartfelt poems."—Publishers Weekly
      "Safia Elhillo's triumph is not that she sings about novel love and heartbreak, but that she does so in an unforgettable voice."—Irene Mathieu, Muzzle
      "Safia Elhillo’s The January Children offers the reader a galaxy of Sudanese voices engaging individual and collective memory in a manner that not only introduces readers to the nuances that animate that ancient land of layered diversity, which lends this collection a collage-like quality that is as sublime in its coherence as it is revelatory in its execution."—Post No Ills Magazine
      “The first sound of what will be a remarkable noise in African poetry. Safia Elhillo has already laid out in this collection a complex foundation for a rich and complex body of work. What is unmistakable is her authority as a poet—she writes with great control and economy, but also with a vulnerability that is deeply engaging. Above all, her poems are filled with delight—a quality of humor that is never trite but always honest and insightful.”—from the foreword by Kwame Dawes

      Table of Contents
      Foreword by Kwame Dawes
      Acknowledgments
      asmarani makes prayer
      vocabulary
      Sudan Today. Nairobi: University of Africa, 1971. Print.
      to make use of water
      [did our mothers invent loneliness or . . . ]
      while being escorted from the abdelhalim hafez concert
      application for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
      abdelhalim hafez asks for references
      talking with an accent about home
      origin stories
      a brief history of silence
      the last time marvin gaye was heard in the sudan
      first interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
      the lovers
      talking with an accent about home
      first adornment
      callback interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
      bride price
      old wives’ tales
      date night with abdelhalim hafez
      first quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
      self-portrait with dirty hair
      watching arab idol with abdelhalim hafez
      self-portrait with the question of race
      second date
      abdelhalim hafez wants to see other people
      red moon night
      self-portrait with yellow dress
      others
      alternate ending
      [& what is a country but the drawing . . . .]
      late-night phone call with abdelhalim hafez
      republic of the sudan / ministry of interior / passport & immigration general directorate / alien from sudanese origin passcard
      talking with an accent about home
      talking with an accent about home (second take)
      second quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
      portrait with asylum
      talking to boys about abdelhalim hafez at parties
      biopic containing lies about abdelhalim hafez
      asmarani does psychogeography
      why abdelhalim
      self-portrait with lake nasser
      abdelhalim hafez asks who the sudanese are
      the part i keep forgetting
      talking with an accent about home (reprise)
      third quarantine with abdelhalim hafez
      final interview for the position of abdelhalim hafez’s girl
      self-portrait as abdelhalim hafez’s girl
      portrait with abdelhalim hafez with the question of race
      lovers’ quarrel with abdelhalim hafez
      portrait of abdelhalim hafez as orpheus
      glossary
      everything i know about abdelhalim hafez
      notes

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