Praise for Walking the Tightrope
Praise for Others Will Enter the Gates
"Others Will Enter the Gates is a multilayered exploration by writers of different generations and backgrounds that passionately offers an urgent and daring insight into America’s ever-expanding literature on the immigrant experience..."
— Dike Okoro
"For its capacious sweep from self-definition to self-invention, from the mother to the many tongued, this collection is indispensable not only for any poet, but for anyone interested in becoming one..."
— Pimone Triplett
"Others Will Enter the Gates is a timely and necessary collection and to say that it is thought-provoking and versatile is an understatement..."
— Virgil Suarez
"Each time I open this book, each time I follow one of these fine poets through another gate in this country of a thousand gates, I feel like an immigrant again, realigned with my own Huguenot ancestors fleeing the religious tyrannies of France three centuries ago. To read these essays is to have your faith in the poetic future of this land restored, over and over again."
— David Shumate
"The great irony and most fabulous beauty of this very real and readable collection of essays are testament to why poetry has lasted for tens of thousands of years..."
— Ralph Angel
"...This is a striking and essential collection, one in which the reader vicariously becomes an immigrant of sorts, allowed to pass over personal and national borders, ferried along by the beautiful and vital prose of some of the finest poets working in the U.S. today."
— Todd Davis
"Others Will Enter the Gates is a multilayered exploration by writers of different generations and backgrounds that passionately offers an urgent and daring insight into America’s ever-expanding literature on the immigrant experience..."
— Dike Okoro
"For its capacious sweep from self-definition to self-invention, from the mother to the many tongued, this collection is indispensable not only for any poet, but for anyone interested in becoming one..."
— Pimone Triplett
"Others Will Enter the Gates is a timely and necessary collection and to say that it is thought-provoking and versatile is an understatement..."
— Virgil Suarez
"Each time I open this book, each time I follow one of these fine poets through another gate in this country of a thousand gates, I feel like an immigrant again, realigned with my own Huguenot ancestors fleeing the religious tyrannies of France three centuries ago. To read these essays is to have your faith in the poetic future of this land restored, over and over again."
— David Shumate
"The great irony and most fabulous beauty of this very real and readable collection of essays are testament to why poetry has lasted for tens of thousands of years..."
— Ralph Angel
"...This is a striking and essential collection, one in which the reader vicariously becomes an immigrant of sorts, allowed to pass over personal and national borders, ferried along by the beautiful and vital prose of some of the finest poets working in the U.S. today."
— Todd Davis
Praise for Sailing for Ithaca
"In this book, back then, now, and tomorrow collapse into a vivid voice, song by song. Far geography becomes one deft swirl that gathers Odysseus, Achebe from Nigeria, Cavafy from Alexandria, a host of village kin, and this immigrant’s lyric wanderings in America into one resonant utterance. Reading, you see the fresh energy of a keen observer informing a new English with the authority of a wise African voice. Like the wild winds and currents of the sea, these forces gather to hasten Animashaun’s bold poems into your dreams." — Kim Stafford
"Sailing for Ithaca is a remarkable manifold and pluralistic poetic journey that seeks 'the country within.' From children playing with rats in a Nigerian 'Beggar's Colony' to tourists drunk and asleep on the Island of Polyphemous, this collection vividly evokes a multiplicity of worlds. Yet, this book of deracination knows that one can come home only in wisdom. No conquering Odysseus here, but rather a generosity of inclusion and relinquishment. The traveler becomes the landscape he travels through, 'The open field/The thick brush/The village/Where nothing lives" and 'The wilderness/Where all is born.' The book itself becomes a journey, inviting us to 'Enter where you can/Leave in delight.'" — Rebecca Seiferle
"These poems are parables of interiority, legends and tales of the unique feeling-scapes within each of us. Sometimes we seem to be journeying to the poet’s childhood in his native Nigeria, while at other times we might be sailing with him to the islands of the Homeric epics. In poem after poem, however, where we are really going is closer and closer to this poet’s sense of the human heart, that “place” where, he writes, we might take sorrow out of the cellar, dress it up in a child’s fresh school-uniform, send it off to meet the others it will study with, help it shake hands and strike up friendships, and laugh at jokes told in the morning light. In poems that are as lucid, sharp, and strange as a waking dream, Animashaun gently guides us toward “the Ithaca within” each of us." — Fred Marchant
"In this book, back then, now, and tomorrow collapse into a vivid voice, song by song. Far geography becomes one deft swirl that gathers Odysseus, Achebe from Nigeria, Cavafy from Alexandria, a host of village kin, and this immigrant’s lyric wanderings in America into one resonant utterance. Reading, you see the fresh energy of a keen observer informing a new English with the authority of a wise African voice. Like the wild winds and currents of the sea, these forces gather to hasten Animashaun’s bold poems into your dreams." — Kim Stafford
"Sailing for Ithaca is a remarkable manifold and pluralistic poetic journey that seeks 'the country within.' From children playing with rats in a Nigerian 'Beggar's Colony' to tourists drunk and asleep on the Island of Polyphemous, this collection vividly evokes a multiplicity of worlds. Yet, this book of deracination knows that one can come home only in wisdom. No conquering Odysseus here, but rather a generosity of inclusion and relinquishment. The traveler becomes the landscape he travels through, 'The open field/The thick brush/The village/Where nothing lives" and 'The wilderness/Where all is born.' The book itself becomes a journey, inviting us to 'Enter where you can/Leave in delight.'" — Rebecca Seiferle
"These poems are parables of interiority, legends and tales of the unique feeling-scapes within each of us. Sometimes we seem to be journeying to the poet’s childhood in his native Nigeria, while at other times we might be sailing with him to the islands of the Homeric epics. In poem after poem, however, where we are really going is closer and closer to this poet’s sense of the human heart, that “place” where, he writes, we might take sorrow out of the cellar, dress it up in a child’s fresh school-uniform, send it off to meet the others it will study with, help it shake hands and strike up friendships, and laugh at jokes told in the morning light. In poems that are as lucid, sharp, and strange as a waking dream, Animashaun gently guides us toward “the Ithaca within” each of us." — Fred Marchant