KAVEH AKBAR’s poems appear in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Paris Review, The Best American Poetry, and elsewhere. He is the author of two poetry collections: Pilgrim Bell and Calling a Wolf a Wolf, in addition to a chapbook, Portrait of the Alcoholic. He is also the editor of The Penguin Book of Spiritual Verse: 110 Poets on the Divine. He lives in Iowa City.
“Incandescent . . . Akbar has created an indelible protagonist,
haunted, searching, utterly magnetic. But it speaks to Akbar’s
storytelling gifts that Martyr! is both a riveting character study
and piercing family saga . . . Akbar is a dazzling writer,
with bars like you wouldn't believe . . . What Akbar pulls off in
Martyr! is nothing short of miraculous.” —The New York Times Book
Review
“Brilliant . . . steeped in humor and absurdity but deathly serious
as well . . . The strength of Martyr! is that Akbar arranges its
various messes well and doesn’t strive too hard to reconcile them.”
—Los Angeles Times
“Martyr! is almost violently artful, full of sentences that stab,
pierce, and slice with their beauty . . . Reading this prose can
feel like watching an Olympic athlete perform household tasks:
Akbar’s writing has the musculature of poetry that can’t rely on
narrative propulsion and so propels itself. It’s tonally nuanced—in
command of a dazzling spectrum of frequencies from comedic to
tragic—rigorous, and surprising.” —The New Yorker
“Wry, blasphemous, grim, grimy and moving . . . Martyr! is so much
its own creation that comparisons don't help. Maybe you could think
of it as something of an Iranian American spin on John Kennedy
Toole's comic picaresque A Confederacy Of Dunces, wedded to Donna
Tartt's The Goldfinch, another meditation on a missing mother and
the unpredictable power of art.” —NPR
“Reading Martyr! is a delight. Sensual, oneiric and wonderfully
strange, Akbar intuits the mind’s talent for distilling meaning
from the surreal. His fiction taps his expertise in conjuring an
experiential purity—through metaphor and with humor that lands.”
—The Washington Post
“An existential comedy about the difficulty of finding beauty in
banality and sense in suffering . . . In writing this novel about a
would-be martyr lost amid the banal clichés and tired stories
Americans tell themselves in order to live, Akbar has shown that
the only way to make meaning out of meaninglessness is to become
the author of our own story.” —The Atlantic
“Akbar's debut is full of love, fury, humor and wisdom. Protagonist
Cyrus Shams-poet, recovering alcoholic, son of one of the
passengers- is coming straight for your heart.” —People
“A deep-feeling, beautifully bruised debut novel . . . [Martyr!]
reads like the book that Akbar has been building up to most of his
life.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“A dazzling, thrilling debut novel about identity and loss . . .
Martyr! thrillingly depicts why we cobble selves from alloys of
words and cultures.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“A brilliant and blisteringly alive novel about not just how
we go on, but also why. Kaveh Akbar's first novel is so stunning,
so wrenching, and so beautifully written that reading it for the
first time, I kept forgetting to breathe. I will carry this story,
and the people in it, with me for the rest of my life." —John
Green, author of The Fault in Our Stars
"I can’t remember the last time a book made me feel like this.
Martyr! is simply extraordinary. The language moves across the page
like a symphony, and the story vibrates with an energy
that made the book impossible to put down. Kaveh Akbar has
written a novel that will stay with me forever. What a story. What
a voice. What a gift.” —Clint Smith, author of How the Word Is
Passed
“Kaveh Akbar renders the full spectrum of life, and death, with
great beauty and care.” —Raven Leilani, author of Luster
“Kaveh Akbar is a radiant soul, a poet so agile and largehearted it
comes as no surprise that his first leap into fiction is elegant,
dizzying, playful. MARTYR! is the best novel you'll ever read
about the joy of language, addiction, displacement, martyrdom,
belonging, homesickness for people longed for but forever unknown,
the way art as eruption of life gazes back into death, and the
ecstasy that sometimes arrives—like grace—when we find ourselves
teetering on the knife-edge of despair.” —Lauren Groff, author of
Fates and Furies
“An absolute jewel of a novel. A diamond. I haven’t loved a book
this much in years. Kaveh’s writing is so thoroughly powerful and
gorgeous you can feel it from where dreams come, and in all over
your brain, and straight from the bottom of your heart. This book
does everything. It is so entirely funny and sad and true and
beautiful. Kaveh Akbar is one of my favorite writers. Ever.”
—Tommy Orange, author of There There
“Kaveh Akbar has given birth to a hilarious marvel of a novel.
Rip-roaringly funny. Wise and wise-assed. It’s about addiction and
love, self-pity and rage and moving instants of profound
redemption. Akbar stands among our greatest poets, but calling this
novel lyrical isn’t code for lack of plot. Akbar is a black-belt
storyteller, and Martyr! is a page-turner I couldn’t put down."
—Mary Karr, author of The Liars' Club
“I disappeared into Martyr!—utterly consumed by it—and then it
returned me to the world with wider eyes, a swollen heart, and
sharpened nerve endings. This is a book that understands the
strangeness and grief and ecstasy of being alive; that understands
the strange envelope of a body, the proximate sublime on the bare
chest of a beloved; the baffled wonderment of sobriety, the grief
that spans every scale of the human project—and, more than
anything, the impossible salvation of love persisting not despite
but through these materials. Kaveh Akbar writes with the staggering
entirety of his mind and heart, and Martyr! will stay in my soul
for good—a fever dream, a reckoning, a heartbreak, a shattering and
mending, a delight—its double-helix of dreams and conversation now
part of my own DNA for good." —Leslie Jamison, author of The
Empathy Exams
“Poet Akbar (Pilgrim Bell, 2021) is an almost deliriously adept
first-time novelist, writing from different points of view and
darting back and forth in time and into Cyrus’ satirical dreams and
the lives of Iranian poets from Rumi to Farrokhzad. Akbar creates
scenes of psychedelic opulence and mystery, emotional precision,
edgy hilarity, and heart-ringing poignancy as his characters endure
war, grief, addiction, and sacrifice, and find refuge in art and
love. Bedazzling and profound." —Booklist (starred review)
“Sublime . . . [Akbar’s] writing makes just enough time for beauty
while never languishing . . . although a novel cannot capture what
life is, its truths and inventions can powerfully gesture toward
what life is like: full of both pain and pleasure, with death
inevitable, and love a choice.” —Bookpage (starred review)
“Martyr! stands out as a work of uncommon artistic assuredness and
vibrancy . . . As carried through by [Akbar’s] poetic pen and
perspective, the novel is rich in humor, sharp observation, and a
plea for self-love, and all bleakness balanced by a tenderness that
generously insinuates itself like sun through shut blinds.”
—Library Journal (starred review)
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