Okey Ndibe first came to the US to act as founding editor of African Commentary, a magazine published by Chinua Achebe. He has taught at Brown University, Connecticut College, Simon's Rock College, Trinity College, and the University of Lagos (as a Fulbright scholar). He is the author of two novels, Arrows of Rain and Foreign Gods, Inc., and the memoir Never Look an American in the Eye, and his award-winning journalism has appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, and The Hartford Courant. Mr. Ndibe lives in West Hartford, Connecticut, with his wife, Sheri, and their three children.
Praise for Arrows of Rain
"Highly evocative."
—Nobel Prize Laureate Wole Soyinka
"The greatest villain in Okey Ndibe's Arrows of Rain is
silence."
—Vanity Fair
"Smart and often deftly written, a parable of power and the
humanity it strips away . . . Arrows of Rain remains a novel of
resistance—if not political resistance, exactly, then resistance at
the level of the soul."
—David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times
"Ndibe is a gifted writer and an adept storyteller, who clearly
exults in the telling."
—Essence Magazine
"A heart-wrenching portrait of Femi Adero, a young journalist who
comes face to face with the extremes of political dictatorship and
the dangers of pursuing unlikely truths."
—Daily Nation (Kenya)
"This novel does what great novels are supposed to do. It creates a
new world that, bigger than ours, closer than ours, more intense
than ours, brings us back to where we live with a better
understanding of just what our lives mean to those we will never
see, touch or know."
—Rick Kleffel, KQED Public Radio
"Arrows of Rain is Greek tragedy . . . It serves as a powerful
reminder that the imprint of history—its machinations and cultural
usurpations, its elevations and denigrations—is not merely on the
subsequent chronicle, but on subsequent individual souls as
well."
—The Cleveland Plain-Dealer
"A moving and compelling novel."
—Brooklyn Bugle
"A fascinating and important story—one that truly must be
told."
—New York Journal of Books
"This haunting work about the costs of silence shows that Nbide,
who was mentored by the towering Chinua Achebe, belongs in the
pantheon of contemporary African-born writers such as Chimamanda
Ngozi Adichie, Nuruddin Farah, Dinaw Mengestu, and Ishmael Beah,
whose powerful stories must be told."
—Library Journal
"What do you do, Ndibe asks, when you are faced with injustice and
total corruption? When to speak will very likely mean your end? A
Kafkaesque, imaginative novel of great necessity and power."
—Kirkus Reviews
"An ambitious and brave first novel . . . [that] could jump start
the moral political mission of serious African literature begun so
well by Ousmane, Ngugi, and the immortal Achebe."
—Michael Ekwueme Thelwell, author of The Harder They Come
"Arrows of Rain is a brooding and powerful first novel from
Nigerian Okey Ndibe . . . a gritty political thriller with real
emotional depth which poses vital questions about our
responsibility to bear witness; to be the custodian of ‘stories
which must be told.’"
—New Internationalist
"Alluring, crisp and lucid . . . [Ndibe] is a novelist who portrays
his characters, whether poor or rich, weak or powerful, with great
complexity."
—Sahara Reporters
"Arrows of Rain is an eloquent, engaging story. The novel makes
evil repellingly ugly by taking off its mask . . . Yes, indeed,
'speech is the mouth's debt to the story'; Ndibe has paid that debt
with a telling that sparkles with felicity and insight."
—Niyi Osundare, author of Pages from the Book of the Sun
"First rate fiction."
—John Edgar Wideman, author of Philadelphia Fire
"A blueprint for the second generation of African novelists."
—Ernest Emenyonu, author of Tales of Our Motherland
Praise for Foreign Gods, Inc.
"Razor-sharp . . . Mr. Ndibe invests his story with enough dark
comedy to make Ngene an odoriferous presence in his own right, and
certainly not the kind of polite exotic rarity that art collectors
are used to . . . In Mr. Ndibe’s agile hands, he’s both a source of
satire and an embodiment of pure terror."
—The New York Times Book Review
"Unforgettable . . . Ndibe seems to have a boundless ear for the
lyrical turns of phrase of the working people of rural Nigeria . .
. The wooden deity 'has character, an audacious personality,' says
one non-African who sees it. So does Ndibe's novel, a page-turning
allegory about the globalized world."
—Los Angeles Times
“We clearly have a fresh talent at work here. It is quite a while
since I sensed creative promise on this level.”
—Wole Soyinka, Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
"Dazzling . . . It's already obvious that 2014 is going to be a big
year for African novels . . . but Okey Ndibe is bound to set
himself apart from the pack. Who doesn't want to read a novel about
a good god heist?"
—The Guardian
"This original [novel] is packed with darkly humorous reflections
on Africa’s obsession with the West, and the West’s obsession with
all things exotic."
—Daily Mail (UK)
"Okey Ndibe’s Foreign Gods, Inc is one of the most
impressive African novels that I have read in years. Comic,
sad—even tragic—Ndibe is a master craftsman, weaving his narrative
with ethnic materials (and surprises) and a profundity that will
startle you by the end of the story . . . Ikechukwu Uzondu’s
journey into his past is as moving and frightful as Brutus Jones’
fate in Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece, The Emperor Jones.
Clearly, this is one writer to watch. Moreover, his insights into
both America and Nigeria will take your breath away."
—CounterPunch
"Foreign Gods, Inc. reads like the narrative of a taxi-driving
Faust in modern Nigeria and America. With Moliere-like humorous
debunking of religious hypocrisy and rancid materialism, it teems
with characters and situations that make you laugh in order not to
cry."
—Ngugi wa Thiong'o, author of Wizard of the Crow
"Foreign Gods, Inc. is a blistering exploration of the
contemporary African immigrant experience in America. Ndibe tackles
tough questions: from the shifting notions of home and identity to
the nature of greed. In prose which is fresh and often funny, Ndibe
draws the reader into the heartbreaking story of Ike Uzondu's
attempt to survive in a world which seems determined to crush
him."
—Chika Unigwe, author of On Black Sisters Street
“Ndibe takes his readers on a transfixing and revelatory journey
from bitter bad faith to hard won, deeply moving and adult
redemption.”
—Francisco Goldman, Say Her Name
"A challenging romp of gods and styles."
—John Edgar Wideman, author of Philadelphia Fire
"If you’ve ever sat in the back of a cab silently—or not so
silently—wondering where your cab driver is from and what his life
is like (and really hasn’t everyone?) then you will be captivated
by Nigerian writer Okey Ndibe’s new novel."
—Metro New York
"The best-laid plans often go awry. But they can certainly make for
an entertaining read."
—The New York Post
"Ndibe writes of cultural clash in a moving way that makes Ike’s
march toward disaster inexorable and ineffably sad."
—Kirkus, STARRED Review
"Neither fable nor melodrama, nor what's crudely niched as 'world
literature,' the novel traces the story of a painstakingly-crafted
protagonist and his community caught up in the inescapable allure
of success defined in Western terms."
—Publishers Weekly, STARRED Review
"Unsuppressible, Okey Ndibe’s Foreign Gods, Inc. is a splendid work
of art that belongs in every reader’s collection. In a masterful
manner, Ndibe manages to blend the traditional belief of his Igbo
ethnic group in Nigeria with the challenges that face many young
and ambitious African immigrants in the USA. The social benefit of
the book is immense."
—Sahara Reporters
"Ndibe writes with a folksy inclusiveness. The village humor, the
greetings and teasing, lend the Utonki sequences a lyrical magic .
. . Into this richly stocked brew of characters, Ndibe skillfully
introduces suspense in the final stretch, guiding readers through
the tension of getting through customs Nigerian-style . . . As an
author with a foot in Nigeria and the U.S., he expertly brings both
worlds to life.
—Shelf Awareness
"A freshly and heartbreakingly recast tale of American immigration,
with all its longings, disappointments, effacements and
reclamations."
—The Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Wonderfully colorful . . . There's more than a touch of Poe, or
perhaps The Twilight Zone, in the surreal conclusion of this
story."
—Hartford Courant
"This is a heist story like no other . . . Ndibe unfurls his rich
narrative gradually, allowing room for plenty of character
interaction while painting a revealing portrait of contemporary
Nigeria. With piercing psychological insight and biting commentary
on the challenges faced by immigrants, the novel is as full-blooded
and fierce as the war deity who drives the story."
—BookList
"On the surface, Foreign Gods, Inc. is a heist book about
a Nigerian cab driver in New York trying to steal an ancient statue
from his village in Nigeria. But Okey Ndibe’s novel delivers
far more than that description suggests, tackling everything from
tradition to trying to make it in America, and the way Western
countries view the rest of the world."
—Flavorwire
"A close associate of the late, great Chinua Achebe, Okey Ndibe
adds his voice to a new generation of writers . . . Foreign Gods,
Inc. features New York-based Nigerian Ike . . . [whose]
picaresque journey, gently but incisively told, shows us the
vagaries of both American and Africa culture."
—Library Journal
"Ndibe’s novel takes on serious themes of cultural exchange, but it
does so in a decidedly comic fashion. All the characters Ike
encounters, in New York and in Nigeria, inject their own brands of
humor into the story."
—Chapter16, Tennessee
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