The Pacific MFA in Writing Program is thrilled to toast faculty writer Chris Abani on the selection of his collection Smoking the Bible as the .
From the UNT announcement: The $10,000 prize recognizes a book written by a mid-career poet and published in the preceding year that demonstrates exceptional artistry and vision. In , Abani memorializesāthrough the imaginative journey that poems so often take ā a brother who has been given the diagnosis of āTerminal.ā Alongside this commitment to elegize a loved one is a second voyage. Often in brief portraits, poems diminutive as carved cameos, Abani writes of migrations to new countries and continents, of leaving behind a homeland that is both āwound and suture,ā a lost landscape whose āpersistent aftertasteā follows the speaker everywhere he goes. Smoking the Bible is a book intent on understanding nostalgia, a word that burns with pain and grief, but one that also suggests the āflutter of release.ā Evocative, rich with sensory detail, Abaniās poems transport the reader from Nigeria to Americaās Midwest, ranging between memory, dream, and revelatory vision. At its heart, Smoking the Bible worries about acts of translation, how difficult it is to translate languages and cultures. And, beyond that, how we struggle to translate the past into present. āI promise / to walk with you as far as I can,ā the speaker tells his dying brother, the space between death and the living the most difficult translation of all.