Okey Ndibe teaches African and African Diaspora literatures at Brown University. He earned MFA and PhD degrees from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and has taught at Connecticut College, Bard College, Trinity College, and the University of Lagos (as a Fulbright scholar). He is also the author of Arrows of Rain and has served on the editorial board of Hartford Courant where his essays won national and state awards. He lives in West Hartford, CT, with his wife, Sheri, and their three children. From the Hardcover edition.
Praise for Foreign Gods, Inc. A NPR Great Read of 2014 A Philadelphia Inquirer Best Book of 2014 The Root 15 Best Novels by a Black Author of 2014 A Cleveland Plain Dealer Best Books of 2014 Selection 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. --Janet Maslin, The New York Times A story of sweeping cultural insight and absurd comedy . . . rendered with a stoic power that moves the reader more than histrionics possibly could. --The Washington Post Unforgettable . . . Ndibe seems to have a boundless ear fo' 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 A hard look at the American dream, which seems to be receding further and further into the distance these days. --GQ Magazine This is precisely the kind of novel that makes one anti-social. If you find it today, sprint home, throw away your cellphone, bolt the front door and don't worry too much if you are not up in time for church tomorrow. --Daily Nation (Kenya) 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 An entertaining, witty adventure . . . Foreign Gods, Inc. is an intelligent, satirical novel that comes highly anticipated and does not disappoint. --The Root A morality tale for our time . . . With subtle hints at moral turmoil, a gift for dark humour, and characterisation that is perceptive and neatly observed, Ndibe manages to persuade the reader to root for Ike, even as his haphazard plans begin to unravel. --The Guardian (UK) Brims with warmth, vibrancy and color . . . Just about perfect. --Paste Magazine Ndibe is a writer's writer, and this book is a lesson in the art of the novel. --New York Journal of Books Ndibe writes of cultural clash in a moving way that makes Ike's march toward disaster inexorable and ineffably sad. --Kirkus Reviews, STARRED Review 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 Wonderfully colorful . . . There's more than a touch of Poe, or perhaps The Twilight Zone, in the surreal conclusion of this story. --The Hartford Courant 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. --Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal