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The January Children
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
15 posts | 11 read | 9 to read
In her dedicationSafia Elhillo writes, The January Children are the generation born in Sudan under British occupation, where children were assigned birth years by height, all given the birth date January 1. What follows is a deeply personal collection of poems that describethe experience of navigating the postcolonial world as astranger in one s own land. The January Children depicts displacement and longing while also questioning accepted truths about geography, history, nationhood, and home. The poems mythologize family histories until they break open, usingthem to explore aspects of Sudan s history of colonial occupation, dictatorship, and diaspora.Several of the poems speak to the late Egyptian singer Abdelhalim Hafez, who addressed many of his songs to the asmarani an Arabic term of endearment for a brown-skinned or dark-skinned person. Elhillo explores Arabness and Africanness and the tensions generated by a hyphenated identity in those two worlds. No longer content to accept manmade borders, Elhillo navigates a newand reimaginedworld. Maintaining a sense of wonder in multiple landscapesand mindscapesof perpetually shifting values, sheleads the reader through a postcolonial narrative that is equally terrifying and tender, melancholy and defiant."
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review
Robotswithpersonality
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Mehso-so

Poet's experience of alienation, violence, colonialism, colourism, racism, in Sudan (Egypt?) and the US.
The inclusion of Arabic within the poems is eloquent in conveying how unlikely it is that I can fully grasp all the layers of meaning present, (though there is a glossary and notes in the back that may assist) any more than I can share all the poet has experienced. Still, I owed it to her work to try. 1/2

Robotswithpersonality 2/2 I think the formatting is both artistic choice and a calculated method of slowing reading down to get the reader to reflect further, but I think in this case it also messed with my reading comprehension. Just a humbling reminder that I'm still a novice at understanding poetry. 2y
5 likes1 comment
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Robotswithpersonality
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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🎂🎁😉

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rockpools
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Pickpick

Well, will you look at that? I‘ve finished my January #bookspin & this month‘s #ReadingAfrica2022 #Sudan.

This was such an interesting collection. Elhillo is a Sudanese-American poet. It‘s her story of living between 2 worlds (speaking with an accent in both), her mother‘s story (Sudan as gardens & Motown), her grandparents story (the title. !.) Language, race, colonialism & ongoing conversations with a (dead) Egyptian singer. I liked this a lot.

Librarybelle This sounds really good! 3y
Cathythoughts Eye catching cover ❤️ 3y
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 3y
68 likes3 comments
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julesG
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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REPOST for @LitsyBirthdays :

The birthday fairies are busy preparing to celebrate all of our Littens‘ January birthdays!

If you‘d like to be added to the list to receive #birthdaylove on your special day, send an email to litsybirthdays@gmail.com, including your Litsy handle and your birthdate. 😊🥳🎉🎈

Let‘s CELEBRATE together!!! 🧚‍♂️🧚‍♀️🧚🧚‍♀️🧚🧚‍♀️

@robinb @squirrelbrain @KarenUK @Crazeedi @gradcat

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tamaria
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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“& i thought i‘d be older before starting to ask
what if i die what happens to everything i haven‘t yet
said”

#thesealeychallenge 7/31

review
eve
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Pickpick

Phenomenal collection from my friend Safia, a poet of Sudanese descent exploring themes of displacement, love, borders, racial identity, and colorism, with characteristic nuance and sensitivity. A melancholic and beautiful little book.

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WanderingBookaneer
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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WanderingBookaneer
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Mehso-so

Not what I look for in a poetry collection in terms of form, but I love the themes of colonization, diaspora, and the issues of identity these states create in the author. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

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anna.hundert
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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"i'm still on a date / and the words say something to me in arabic / fall backwards down his throat / {next page} / & what is a country but the drawing of a line I draw thick black / lines around my eyes & they are a country & thick red lines around / my lips & they are a country"

(from "alternate ending," a poem about midway through The January Children)

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afra.hamid
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Pickpick

Been dying to get my hands on this and it was totally worth it!

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Erin01
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Erin01
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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starting off my saturday wih some poetry 📖

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RealLifeReading
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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I seem to have a lot of new followers this weekend! Hello newest of Littens! Hope you have fun here on Litsy! If you're stuck on what to post, join in on the monthly book photo challenge #readjanuary and tag me so I can see what you're up to!

Also stop by and say hi and tell us what you're up to, whether you're new or not!

I've been baking for Lunar New Year next week - chocolate chip cookies and pork floss cookies!

Chrissyreadit Now I get it! I was confused... 8y
bio_chem06 @RealLifeReading is there going to be one of these for February. I was late to the party on this and want to get involved with the posts :) 8y
Seekingtardis I'm with @bio_chem06 what about February? 🙃 8y
See All 12 Comments
RealLifeReading @bio_chem06 @Seekingtardis yup! I'll post a new list later this week! 😀 8y
Bookzombie @bio_chem06 @Seekingtardis Along with the great one @RealLifeReading does, @LibrarianRyan is also doing one that runs Feb 1st to Feb 14th. Both are always fun! 8y
BethFishReads Hey I started the month strong. Maybe February ???? 8y
Seekingtardis @Bookzombie thank you love!! 8y
DebinHawaii So many new Litsy peeps today! Welcome everyone! 🎉📚👍😀 8y
arlenefinnigan This is a really stupid question but how do you tag someone in a post? 8y
RealLifeReading @arlenefinnigan you could just put the "@" and the username. Or if it is your own post there should be an icon (if you're on iOS. Not sure what Android looks like) next to "Add image" that lets you tag 8y
RealLifeReading @BethFishReads you can do it! 😘 8y
130 likes12 comments
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RealLifeReading
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Happy new year everyone! Today's #readjanuary prompt is #bookishresolutions
What resolutions are you making for this new reading year? More classics? More #diversereads? More books in translation? More posting on Litsy? More reading? Less (or more?) book buying? Let us all know!

BethFishReads I actually remembered to play along today ! 8y
Hollie I am definitely making an effort to diversify my reading in 2017, and also to make more use of audio books! 8y
LauraJ Love this month's themes. How do you keep this fresh 365? 8y
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kspenmoll You are amazing- thanks so much for doing this; I enjoy posting & seeing other Littens posts. 8y
kspenmoll I am trying to buy less ( oops 3 BOTM picks), use library more often, widen my reading taste, do the #LitsyAtoZ challenge. 📚📚📚💚 8y
BookBabe Great themes! Keep up the awesome work! 🙌🏻 8y
LeeRHarry January is looking good thanks @RealLifeReading !!! 8y
Lmstraubie This is such a great way to inspire conversation. Thank you for putting this together ☺ 8y
RealLifeReading @Hollie I want to listen to more audiobooks too! 8y
RealLifeReading @LauraJ well later this month I'll attempt soliciting for suggestions for Feb's! 8y
RealLifeReading @kspenmoll aww thanks! 😄 8y
RealLifeReading @BookBabe thanks! 😘 8y
RealLifeReading @LeeRHarry you're welcome! Have fun! 8y
RealLifeReading @lmstraubie you're welcome! 😘 8y
155 likes15 comments
review
ReadingEnvy
The January Children | Safia Elhillo
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Pickpick

Safia Elhillo, a Sudanese-American poet, was one of the best discoveries I made in my year of intentionally reading more African literature. Sudan has changed immensely since her parents were young and these poems are about language and place, identity and belonging. My favorite was left out of this collection so I will link to it in the comments. Her words are strong on the page but when she performs them, she weaves poems together into stories.

66 likes4 stack adds1 comment