
2007 - Jamaican Observer Book Club Pick
2006 - Finalist, Dublin IMPAC Award
2005 - Today Show Book Club Pick
Winner 2005 - Hemingway/PEN Prize
Winner 2005 Silver Medal - California Book
Awards
Winner 2005 - Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards
for Debut Fiction
Shortlisted for Best Book Category (Africa Region) of The
Commonwealth Writer's Prize
Finalist 2005 - Los Angeles Times Book Prize
25 Best Books of 2004 - Los Angeles Times
Best Books of 2004 - San Francsico Chronicle
Barnes and Noble Discover
Series Selection
New York Times Book Review Summer
2004 "Vacation Reading/Notable Books" Selection
The sprawling, swampy, cacophonous city of Lagos, Nigeria, provides
the backdrop to the story of Elvis, a teenage Elvis impersonator
hoping to make his way out of the ghetto. Broke, beset by floods,
and beatings by his alcoholic father, and with no job opportunities
in sight, Elvis is tempted by a life of crime. Thus begins his odyssey
into the dangerous underworld of Lagos, guided by his friend Redemption
and accompanied by a restless hybrid of voices including The King
of Beggars, Sunday, Innocent and Comfort. Young Elvis, drenched
in reggae and jazz, and besotted with American film heroes and images,
must find his way to a GraceLand of his own. Nuanced, lyrical, and
pitch perfect, Abani has created a remarkable story of a son and
his father, and an examination of postcolonial Nigeria where the
trappings of American culture reign supreme.
"...one of the most astonishing metropolitan novels of our
time”! - The New York Times Book Review
"Extraordinary...This book works brilliantly in two ways.
As a convincing and unpatronizing record of life in a poor Nigerian
slum, and as a frighteningly honest insight into a world skewed
by casual violence, it's wonderful...And for all the horrors, there
are sweet scenes in Graceland too, and they're a thousand times
better for being entirely unsentimental...Lovely." --The
New York Times Book Review
"Abani's intensely visual style--and his sense of humor--convert
the stuff of hopelessness into the stuff of hope." -San
Francisco Chronicle
"GRACELAND amply demonstrates that Abani has the energy, ambition
and compassion to create a novel that delineates and illuminates
a complicated, dynamic, deeply fractured society."-Los
Angeles Times
"A wonderfully vivid evocation of a youth coming of age in
a country unmoored from its old virtues . . . As for the talented
Chris Abani . . . his imaginary Elvis is easily as memorable as
the original."-Newsday
"GraceLand teems with incident, from the seedy crime dens of
Maroko to the family melodramas of the Oke clan. But throughout
the novel's action, Abani-an accomplished poet who published his
own first novel at Elvis's tender age of 16-keeps the reader's gaze
fixed firmly on the detailed and contradictory cast of everyday
Nigerian life. Energetic and moving . . . Abani [is] a fluid, closely
observant writer."-The Washington Post
"A wonderfully vivid evocation of a youth coming of age in
a country unmoored from its old virtues....As for the talented Abani,
Nigeria's loss is America's gain. His imaginary Elvis is easily
as memorable as the original."
-Chicago Tribune
“Abani… has written an exhilarating novel, all the
more astonishing for its hard-won grace and, yes, redemption.”
The Village Voice
"Ambitious...a kind of small miracle." --John Freeman,
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"It is to be hoped that Mr. Abani's fine book finds its proper
place in the world...[Abani's] perception of the world is beyond
or outside the common categories of contemporary fiction and he
is able to describe what he perceives compellingly and effectively...The
novel is a reflection of the chaos that reigned in Nigeria...on
the broader tension between tradition and Western culture in postcolonial
societies [and] on the trials a boy must face to become a man. ..[Abani
captures] the awful, mysterious refusal of life's discrete pieces
to fit" --Tim Marchman, The New York
Sun
"An intensely vivid portrait of Nigeria that switches deftly
between rural and urban life." --Boston
Globe
"Singular...Abani has created a charming and complex character,
at once pragmatic and philosophical about his lot in life...Observes
the chaotic tapestry of life in postcolonial Africa with the unjudging
eye of a naive boy." --The Philadelphia
Inquirer
"The imagery of the book is tremendous...a mesmerizing glimpse
at a polarized society with an unbelievable ability to function...Abani's
debut is spectacular, and may be just the spark today's Nigeria
needs to undergo its own revival in stability, progress and culture."
--The Univ of Wisconsin Daily Cardinal
"[Abani's novel is] deeply concerned with how Western colonialism
transformed Africa in ways both major and minor . . . Abani masterfully
gives us a young man who is simultaneously brave, heartless, bright,
foolish, lustful, and sadly resigned to fate. In short, a perfectly
drawn adolescent . . . Abani's ear for dialogue and eye for observation
lend a lyrical air . . . In depicting how deeply external politics
can affect internal thinking, GraceLand announces itself as a worthy
heir to Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart. Like that classic of
Nigerian literature, it gives a multifaceted, human face to a culture
struggling to find its own identity while living with somebody else's."—Minneapolis
Star-Tribune
"The next wave...of Nigerian literature." --America
Magazine
"Beautifully written, perceptive and painful...A serious and
poignant novel about the problems in the postcolonial era in Nigeria."
--Altar Magazine
"GRACELAND is an invaluable document." -The
San Diego Union-Tribune
"Remarkable....Chris Abani's striking new novel, GRACELAND,
wins the reader with its concept-an Elvis impersonator in Nigeria-and
keeps him with strong storytelling and characterization.... GRACELAND
marks the debut of a writer with something important to say."-New
Orleans Times-Picayune
"The novel is not just a politically charged coming of age
story, but a tale of an entire nation's loss of innocence represented
in the life of one boy. And it is this thematic largesse and the
stylistic demands to which Abani rises that puts GraceLand in the
league of novels like Czeslaw Milosz's The Issa Valley, Oe and even
Marquez, each of which tries to describe the loss of an old world
in the face of a new one...GraceLand is an overwhelming novel, and
may well count as a major work of literature." --The
Seattle Sinner
"GRACELAND paints an often horrific and sometimes profound
portrait....Though a work of fiction, GRACELAND also serves as a
history far more powerful and fantastic than any official account
of Nigeria's teetering progress toward democracy."-Seattle
Weekly
"The book's juxtaposition between innocence and bleak survival
is heart-rending....Sharp, graphic, and impossible to dismiss."
-The Seattle Times
"Disturbing but hysterically funny, GraceLand is a poignant
work of innocence robbed by endless corrupt and brutal forces."
--India in New York
"Chris Abani's GraceLand is a richly detailed, poignant, and
utterly fascinating look into another culture and how it is cross-pollinated
by our own. It brings to mind the work of Ha Jin in its power and
revelation of the new."
— T.Coraghessan Boyle,
Author of Drop City
"To say that this is a Nigerian or African novel is to miss
the point. This absolutely beautiful work of fiction is about complex
and strained political structures, the irony of the West being a
measure of civilization, and the tricky business of being a son.
Abani's language is beautiful and his story is important."
— Percival Everett, Author
Erasure: A Novel
"Graceland is a painful look at an urban culture seemingly
always on the verge of complete societal breakdown. Chris Abani's
riveting novel is a superbly written, structurally fascinating work
and I found myself captivated by the hilarity of some of the scenes,
often as I found myself on the verge of tears. It is a stunning
debut by an immensely talented writer."
— Quincy Troupe,
Author of Transcircularity, Miles: The Autobiograpy and Miles and
Me.
This is a new kind of book. We will look back on its publication
as a watershed moment in the history of postcolonial literature.
It is, as the best of such novels are, hybrid, monstrous, exilic,
an indictment of the global terrorism of capital, yet it is also
something we have not seen before. In Elvis we meet an African man
who suffers incandescently, who watches others suffer more, yet
emerges not as another tragic masculinity, but as that rarest of
creatures, a hero. This is Chris Abani's gift, to transmute the
harrowing into the transcendent. Believe it: Elvis is redemption.
— Wendy Belcher, Author
of Honey From the Lion: An African Journey.
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