cover image A Poet of the Invisible World

A Poet of the Invisible World

Michael Golding. Picador, $16 trade paper (336p) ISBN 978-1-250-07128-6

Golding (Simple Prayers) traces the spiritual journey of Nouri Ahmad Mohammad ibn Mahsoud al-Morad, born with two sets of ears, from early life as an orphan raised by Sufi dervishes in Persia to the far corners of the medieval Islamic world. Nouri's mother tries to protect her infant son from superstitious villagers by bringing him to a nearby city, where she dies and he falls into the arms of Habib, a humble caretaker at a Sufi lodge. Habib, whose hand was crushed by an elephant in a childhood accident, tries at first to keep Nouri's presence secret, bathing him in a soup pot and feeding him stolen goat's milk. Once the baby is discovered, the brothers welcome him into their community%E2%80%94all except mean-spirited Sharoud, Nouri's lifelong nemesis. Nouri has to contend with Sharoud's resentment and an extra pair of ears, and he struggles with his attraction to other boys. After the boy he likes best is killed in a marauders' attack, Nouri begins his wanderings, during which he becomes a tea boy to the Right Hand at the Sultan's palace, a shepherd on the Spanish countryside, a laundry laborer, a poet, a drug addict, and a lost soul eventually taking refuge at yet another Sufi retreat. Golding creates an Arabian Nights atmosphere infused with compassion for human weakness and diversity, and appreciation for the wonder and temporality of all things. He depicts darkly realistic and luminously magical moments through evocative imagery, captivating storytelling, and gentle insight into one flawed aspirant's search for identity, enlightenment, and acceptance. (Oct.)