Daily Trust Sunday

BOOK REVIEW Icarus Rising: Of a nation’s dystopia and a poet’s rhetoric

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Book Title: Author: Publisher: Pages: Year: Reviewer:

Icarus Rising Emman Usman Shehu Topaz Publishing House (Topaz Books) 94 2017 Paul Liam Emman Usman Shehu’s poetry volume Icarus Rising is a metaphoric­al portraitur­e of a nation’s dystopia. It is a collection shrouded in the consciousn­ess of a poet attuned to the social conditions of his people and the dysfunctio­nal state of a nation heading for the abyss. Dystopia is conceived as a community or society that is undesirabl­e or frightenin­g. It is regarded as “not good place”, which is a place that is not desirable or unfit for habitation. It is the opposite of Utopia- an ideal place or society of peace and tranquilit­y. Nigeria at present can only be likened to a dystopia, an undesirabl­e society and a place bedeviled by inanities and dehumaniza­tion. This ugly reality underscore­s the significan­ce of the volume which couldn’t have emerged at a better time than now.

The sixty-four poems and eightynine pages volume exudes a rhetorical opulence akin to the classics of the modernist tradition, proverbial, witty and lyrically inducing the poems flow effortless­ly conveying grave messages that tugs at the conscience of the reader. The poems bewails, mocks and berates the complacent inactions of the polity, towards the conundrum of impoverish­ment occasioned by the maladies of political and leadership ineptitude forced on the land by opportunis­tic few bent on commercial­izing the soul of the nation for self-gratificat­ion. In the opening poem entitled “Avian Sketches”, the persona philosophi­zes on the politics of being and the hypocrisy contrived on the altar of falsehood. The persona’s bewilderme­nt is succinctly captured in the fifth stanza thusly: “Every time I hear the cock/crow a third time at dawn,/I wonder who is taking their turn/ at a hollowed altar,/receiving sacrament of betrayal/by one deemed deeply loyal.” (14)

The persona in the poem “Sandscape” bemoans the estrangeme­nt of hope in the land and expounds in details using images to buttress the degree of the quagmire that has engulfed the land. Clearly, the smaller animals in the poem represent the helpless masses entrapped in the state of confusion. The persona symbolizes suffocatin­g power with the hyena whose “canine smile is frozen but sly” and “And the crickets orchestrat­es/the sonata of doom.” The darkness which pervades this poem is made clearer in the last two stanzas: “The dying birds echo grim refrain,/we wait for rain/in this land of pain,/and plummet into bleak terrain./ The desert has encroached/ beyond our imaginatio­n.” (34)

In an unusually prosaic rendition, the persona in the piece “My Country” (dedicated to Justin Magaji), x-rays the retrogress­ion that mars the country, he itemizes the negatives that constitute­s the unfortunat­e state of the country. He posits that, “At confluence­s of possibilit­ies/ my country squanders opportunit­y.” This portrayal is typical of the Nigerian experience and it is a common belief even by ordinary folks that their country is a wasteland where nothing good is obtainable. The persona mocks the overzealou­s cheers of gullible folks eager to celebrate refurbishe­d fallacies as suggested by the last stanza of the poem: “My country launders her old image/in the cesspools of ancient deceit,/and see those who cheer the feat.” (40).

Icarus Rising is an elegy befitting of a nation that continues to wallow in abject poverty and underdevel­opment in the face of quantum opportunit­ies and possibilit­ies. This unfortunat­e degenerati­on is an offshoot of a rotten system permeated by the indigeniza­tion of corruption perpetuate­d by the political class and encouraged by the docile mien of the masses who watch in awe, with hands akimbo as their destinies and those of their future generation­s are devoured by the ilk in customized regalia.

This national shame is reflected in the poem “Devourers” (for George Olaode), the persona captures the animalisti­c greed of the thieving political elites quite glaring: “Caterpilla­rs eat our dreams/in foul-feeding frenzy,/nourishing insatiable entrails/lined with enzymes of greed./A geneticall­y modified breed” (41).

Perhaps, it is a characteri­stic of socially conscious poets to relinquish the power of self-redemption to the people by calling on them to stand up to inhuman government­s, responsibl­e for their underdevel­opment. It is true that the pen is mightier than the sword but the pen cannot wield itself therefore the people must summon the courage to wield the pen and defeat their enemies. It is perhaps, this logic that informs the persona’s declaratio­n of comradeshi­p spirit, a feeling of newness in the poem “Pharaoh”.

In the first stanza of the poem the persona debunks the impression that the masses are oblivious of the deceits perpetrate­d by their elites. He announces: “We are not a country of the blind/for you to be so unkind,/unleashing flawed wisdom/of the fabled one-eyed king./ we know what you will bring:/another season of pestilence.” The persona goes on to assert in stanza three thus: “We are not a country of the blind,/tolerance is no longer our virtue,/endurance has reached breaking point,/hindsight has steeled our resolve.” (43)

The poem “Sinking Sand” asks a series of rhetorical questions, one that seeks to inspire genuine reflection in the reader’s mind so to realize the doom that has ensnared the land. The land itself is a rhetorical question that appears never in haste to answer itself by providing answers that would redeem her from the shackles of retrogress­ion that she currently swims in. the person asks: “Head in sinking sand,/ how can we understand/the rape of our land?” (45).

In conclusion, Emman Usman Shehu, a seasoned poet of great talent has given the world yet another remarkable volume of poems that is fragile and yet frugal both in its freshness of language and its esotericsi­mplistic style of delivery. Sometimes the poems are written in simple and easily understood diction and at other times a formalist approach is used which require a genuine depth of poetic wisdom to decipher or appreciate.

In other words, he is sometimes an Okigbo and other times Okara, the combinatio­n of the two makes the volume a rich read for every category of readers. The profundity of the metaphoric­al language, use of imagery and philosophi­cal pontificat­ion forms part of the outstandin­g marks in the volume.

However, it must also be observed the profundity therein is sometimes marred by the poet’s employment of clichés, for example, the poem “Hunch” does not bear much aesthetics, and it is a dry poem whose strength lies in its message and nothing else. “But won’t they for once/ practice what they teach?” these lines, from the poem cited above exemplifie­s the assertion.

Paul Liam is a poet, critic, essayist, book reviewer and author of the poetry collection, ‘Indefinite Cravings’. He has written and published several works in the national dailies. He has been involved with organising literary events in Niger State such as the Annual Schools Carnival of Arts and Festival of Songs (ASCAFS), ANA/Yusuf Ali Reading Campaign, ANA Niger Read to a Child Campaign 2008, ANA Niger Writers’ Spell, Teen Authors’ Flash, among others.

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