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Fasting for Ramadan by Kazim Ali — book cover

Fasting for Ramadan

by Kazim Ali
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Overview

Fasting for Ramadan is structured as a chronicle of daily meditations, during two cycles of the 30-day rite of daytime abstinence required by Ramadan for purgation and prayer, to which Kazim Ali brings an extraordinary delicacy of reflection, a powerfully inquiring mind, and the linguistic precision and ardor of a superb poet. Ali's searching descriptions of the Ramadan sensibility and its arduous but liberating annual rite of communal fasting are sure to be a revelation to many readers—intellectually illuminating and aesthetically exhilarating.

About the Author, Kazim Ali

Kazim Ali is the author of two volumes of poetry, The Far Mosque (Alice James, 2005) and The Fortieth Day (BOA, 2008), three books of prose, and a collection of critical writing, as well as a mixed-genre book, Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities (Wesleyan University Press, 2009), finalist for the Ohioana Book Award for Poetry and the Lantern Award for Memoir. Founding editor of Nightboat Books, he now teaches Creative Writing and Literature at Oberlin College and in the University of Southern Maine's low-residency M.F.A. program.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Poet, essayist, and creative writing teacher Ali (Bright Felon) adds a postmodern twist to the venerable tradition of spiritual journals with this collection of public blog posts and intimate reflections about his experiences fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim season of cleansing, self-discipline, and humility. Constructed around two 30-day cycles, Ali provides subtle yet robust daily meditations on the shifting levels of his spiritual awareness and attention while he refrains from food and water during daylight hours. "The body is like the fasting month itself," writes Ali, "with its own periods of activity and restraint, its own nights of revelation." Drawing on Quranic verses, adages recalled from childhood, and unsparing introspection, Ali brings a razor-sharp minimalism to his prose. From morning runs through the pre-dawn streets in Oberlin, Ohio, planning his high-protein morning meal to post-dusk iftar meals with students who offer prayers in his yoga studio, readers are wooed with intelligent prose onto this pilgrim's path. Those seeking traditional Islamic piety or a logic-driven religious apologetic will not find it here. Instead, Ali boldly sketches the modern artist engaged in an ancient religious practice in an age of iftar Tweetups and iQuran mobile phone apps.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly

Poet, essayist, and creative writing teacher Ali (Bright Felon) adds a postmodern twist to the venerable tradition of spiritual journals with this collection of public blog posts and intimate reflections about his experiences fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim season of cleansing, self-discipline, and humility. Constructed around two 30-day cycles, Ali provides subtle yet robust daily meditations on the shifting levels of his spiritual awareness and attention while he refrains from food and water during daylight hours. "The body is like the fasting month itself," writes Ali, "with its own periods of activity and restraint, its own nights of revelation." Drawing on Quranic verses, adages recalled from childhood, and unsparing introspection, Ali brings a razor-sharp minimalism to his prose. From morning runs through the pre-dawn streets in Oberlin, Ohio, planning his high-protein morning meal to post-dusk iftar meals with students who offer prayers in his yoga studio, readers are wooed with intelligent prose onto this pilgrim's path. Those seeking traditional Islamic piety or a logic-driven religious apologetic will not find it here. Instead, Ali boldly sketches the modern artist engaged in an ancient religious practice in an age of iftar Tweetups and iQuran mobile phone apps.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly

Poet, essayist, and creative writing teacher Ali (Bright Felon) adds a postmodern twist to the venerable tradition of spiritual journals with this collection of public blog posts and intimate reflections about his experiences fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim season of cleansing, self-discipline, and humility. Constructed around two 30-day cycles, Ali provides subtle yet robust daily meditations on the shifting levels of his spiritual awareness and attention while he refrains from food and water during daylight hours. "The body is like the fasting month itself," writes Ali, "with its own periods of activity and restraint, its own nights of revelation." Drawing on Quranic verses, adages recalled from childhood, and unsparing introspection, Ali brings a razor-sharp minimalism to his prose. From morning runs through the pre-dawn streets in Oberlin, Ohio, planning his high-protein morning meal to post-dusk iftar meals with students who offer prayers in his yoga studio, readers are wooed with intelligent prose onto this pilgrim's path. Those seeking traditional Islamic piety or a logic-driven religious apologetic will not find it here. Instead, Ali boldly sketches the modern artist engaged in an ancient religious practice in an age of iftar Tweetups and iQuran mobile phone apps.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly

Poet, essayist, and creative writing teacher Ali (Bright Felon) adds a postmodern twist to the venerable tradition of spiritual journals with this collection of public blog posts and intimate reflections about his experiences fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim season of cleansing, self-discipline, and humility. Constructed around two 30-day cycles, Ali provides subtle yet robust daily meditations on the shifting levels of his spiritual awareness and attention while he refrains from food and water during daylight hours. "The body is like the fasting month itself," writes Ali, "with its own periods of activity and restraint, its own nights of revelation." Drawing on Quranic verses, adages recalled from childhood, and unsparing introspection, Ali brings a razor-sharp minimalism to his prose. From morning runs through the pre-dawn streets in Oberlin, Ohio, planning his high-protein morning meal to post-dusk iftar meals with students who offer prayers in his yoga studio, readers are wooed with intelligent prose onto this pilgrim's path. Those seeking traditional Islamic piety or a logic-driven religious apologetic will not find it here. Instead, Ali boldly sketches the modern artist engaged in an ancient religious practice in an age of iftar Tweetups and iQuran mobile phone apps.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly

Poet, essayist, and creative writing teacher Ali (Bright Felon) adds a postmodern twist to the venerable tradition of spiritual journals with this collection of public blog posts and intimate reflections about his experiences fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim season of cleansing, self-discipline, and humility. Constructed around two 30-day cycles, Ali provides subtle yet robust daily meditations on the shifting levels of his spiritual awareness and attention while he refrains from food and water during daylight hours. "The body is like the fasting month itself," writes Ali, "with its own periods of activity and restraint, its own nights of revelation." Drawing on Quranic verses, adages recalled from childhood, and unsparing introspection, Ali brings a razor-sharp minimalism to his prose. From morning runs through the pre-dawn streets in Oberlin, Ohio, planning his high-protein morning meal to post-dusk iftar meals with students who offer prayers in his yoga studio, readers are wooed with intelligent prose onto this pilgrim's path. Those seeking traditional Islamic piety or a logic-driven religious apologetic will not find it here. Instead, Ali boldly sketches the modern artist engaged in an ancient religious practice in an age of iftar Tweetups and iQuran mobile phone apps.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Book Details

Published
April 30, 2011
Publisher
Tupelo Press, Inc.
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781932195941

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