Publishers Weekly reviews The Far Mosque:

 

Moving between biblical and Qur'anic stories, sections of this debut explore questions of comparative faith: "Why not a religion of water in a time of great fires?" Painterly minimalism, open-field technique and Near Eastern traditions together give Ali a neatly varied verbal palette for his smart, quietly attractive poems. Single-line stanzas and unrhymed couplets portray visionary and partly abstract spaces where "all the eventual answers are nothing," and a questing reader "will sometime soon say: I am coming home now ." A sequence set in France finds the same calm conundrums in its cathedrals and beaches, with their "silent groundswell, the swell of silence," while in later poems Ali pays homage by name to Emily Dickinson, to Rumi and to the painter Agnes Martin. Readers who seek explicitly Islamic material will find it near the end of the book, where unrhymed sonnets and an accomplished ghazal trace a search for spirit in nature and in the void: "Night" advises a rapt observer: "You are no plagiarist of dusk./ Nothing in the sky equals itself." Ali has also published a novel, Quinn's Passage ; his unresting intellect and acoustic talents make him a poet to watch. (Nov.)

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Library Journal reviews The Far Mosque:

 

Ali, author of the novel Quinn's Passage, reveals a rich and daring poetic voice in his first book of poetry. If one of the poet's tasks is to revive the mythological powers in things, Ali does so skillfully here. The poet aims to expand the space of meaning by relying on the juxtapositions of dense and deep imagery: "The wind over open water: Sharp howling/Guitar strings breaking." His poetry is reminiscent of the works of French poet René Char in its surrealistic style and lyrical fragmentations. In addition, the mystic voices of the East, which express a passionate yearning for a harmonious unity with absolute beauty, are echoed throughout most of his poems. Here the self delves inward to discover and celebrate the pure light of awakening: "One day in the marketplace, estranged and weeping/ you will understand the only far mosque is the one within." Ali's poetry resists any easy interpretations and hence invites the reader to participate in the act of writing. Recommended for large public libraries.-Sadiq Alkoriji, Tomball Coll. & Community Lib., Harris Cty., TX

 

The Far Mosque be ordered from Alice James Books. Check out the book's webpage at www.alicejamesbooks.org/far_mosque.html

 

 

 

Quinn's Passage named one of The Best Books of 2005 by Chronogram!

 

Kazim's  novel Quinn's Passage can now be ordered from Amazon.com here.

 

Michael Joyce, novelist and professor of English at Vassar College says, "Quinn's Passage is a delicious book, evoking the helical flows of its patron saint, Virginia Woolf, as well as the elegiac patterns of writers like Carole Maso in its pilgrimage of an artist's soul through a world recognizable to any of us. The novel combines a deft, poetic ear and nimble erudition and poetry to evoke the rhythm of time, a tidal succession of events, memories, visions, and passions which embody ‘the ocean dance’ that its title character ‘choreographs under his breath.’"

 

 

Electronic Chapbook River Road:

 

http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/kazimali.html

 

 

 

 

 

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