A Poet of the Invisible World: A Novel

A Poet of the Invisible World: A Novel

by Michael Golding

Narrated by Kirby Heyborne

Unabridged — 9 hours, 36 minutes

A Poet of the Invisible World: A Novel

A Poet of the Invisible World: A Novel

by Michael Golding

Narrated by Kirby Heyborne

Unabridged — 9 hours, 36 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$20.00
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $20.00

Overview

In the tradition of*Siddhartha*by Hermann Hesse comes a new spiritual novel that is a stunning feat of storytelling and imagination.*A Poet of the Invisible World*follows a boy named Nouri, born in thirteenth-century Persia, with four ears instead of two. Orphaned as an infant, he's taken into a Sufi order, where he meets an assortment of dervishes and is placed upon a path toward spiritual awakening. As he stumbles from one painful experience to the next, he grows into manhood. Each trial he endures shatters another obstacle within--and leads Nouri on toward transcendence.

Editorial Reviews

MARCH 2016 - AudioFile

This is a mystical tale about a boy born with four ears. From the start, it’s the sort of audiobook that takes listeners on a magic carpet ride with its combination of narration and story. Kirby Heyborne's soft tones pull the listener into the life of orphaned Nouri, who is coming of age in ancient Persia. The boy is taken in by whirling dervishes, a unique event that is the first of many stages in his journey. Heyborne dramatizes Nouri's struggles as he moves from one trial to another. Fans of spiritual fiction will find themselves in the thrall of an experienced narrator who provides a compelling listening experience. M.R. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

11/09/2015
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—all 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.)

From the Publisher

"Golding presents us with some heady themes in A Poet of the Invisible World. We’re asked to consider how we seek life’s truths, the curative and expressive roles of art, and how experience–often painful–can bring us to a deeper understanding of life. In the wrong hands, these themes could make for a ponderous novel. It is a testament to Golding’s skills as a writer that there’s a curious buoyancy here, a charm, a feeling that this isn’t so much an intellectual exercise as it is one of pure storytelling. At times, A Poet of the Invisible World reads like a story handed down in the oral tradition, in the same way some of Gabriel García-Márquez’s stories do. And despite its many Dickensian twists and turns, Nouri’s search for spiritual fulfillment is not complex. 'The truth is simple,' Nouri tells Ryka one day as they climb a mountain. 'It is we who are complicated.' It’s what Golding seems to be telling us as well in this beautiful novel." —Ken Harvey, Lambda Literary

"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." —Publisher's Weekly

"Golding’s writing is always beautiful, but this story has a lushness you will sink into." —Angel Curtis, Out Smart

“Golding provides a fascinating primer on the ascetic ideals of Sufism while glorifying our physical natures, elegantly describe Nouri’s sexual awakening and the love he feels for his young protégée, Ryka. This mesmerizing novel is a gift to anyone looking for a transcendent reading experience.” —Sally Bissell, Library Journal

“Taut storytelling and vivid characterization…an astute portrayal of human frailties (jealousy,
cowardice) and the redeeming power of words and love.” —Poornima Apte, Booklist

“In this stunningly vivid novel, Michael Golding has created a world that's anything but invisible. With grace and magic reminiscent of One Thousand and One Nights (Arabian Nights), A POET OF THE INVISIBLE WORLD is an ecstatic, enlightened whirlwind of profound contemplation and resplendent beauty, grounded by the certainty of its richly saturated landscape, enthralling story and lyrical voice. I was utterly enchanted!” —Ruth Ozeki, New York Times bestselling author of A Tale for the Time Being

“This is a novel that we, as readers, yearn to find: The pages contain a journey, a fable, and a lifetime. It is a book that one feels one has previously known in dreams, and which glows in memory and visions long after it is closed.” —Vincent Lam, author of The Headmaster's Wager

“During the time I was reading this mysterious, enchanting novel, I found myself picking it up with increasing urgency, driven by a kind of yearning at once spiritual and literary. Deftly wrapping transcendence in experience, enlightenment in pain, and the sacred in the earthly, Michael Golding has given us a story for the ages.” —John Burnham Schwartz, bestselling author of Reservation Road and The Commoner

Library Journal

★ 08/01/2015
In this beautifully imagined parable set in 13th-century Persia, readers accompany a child named Nouri on a lifelong path toward spiritual enlightenment. An orphan, born with an unusual birth defect that some see as a gift from Allah but others believe is an evil aberration, Nouri lands in the protective embrace of Habbib, a sweeper who works for a small sect of Sufi mystics. For months, Habbib shelters Nouri in his cell at the monastery, showering the angelic baby with tenderness while fearing he will be discovered. But when Nouri's presence becomes known, Sheikh Bailiri welcomes the child, teaching him the wonders of language and encouraging a future of contemplation and selflessness. Though various dark forces, from a jealous contemporary to an attack by marauding soldiers, send Nouri on a perilous detour, his innate goodness gives him the strength to eventually distinguish between the sacred and the profane. VERDICT Golding (Simple Prayers; Benjamin's Gift) provides a fascinating primer on the ascetic ideals of Sufism while simultaneously glorifying our physical natures, elegantly describing Nouri's sexual awakening and the love he feels for his young protégée, Ryka. This mesmerizing novel is a gift to anyone looking for a transcendent reading experience. [See Prepub Alert, 4/27/15.]—Sally Bissell, Lee Cty. Lib. Syst., Fort Myers, FL

MARCH 2016 - AudioFile

This is a mystical tale about a boy born with four ears. From the start, it’s the sort of audiobook that takes listeners on a magic carpet ride with its combination of narration and story. Kirby Heyborne's soft tones pull the listener into the life of orphaned Nouri, who is coming of age in ancient Persia. The boy is taken in by whirling dervishes, a unique event that is the first of many stages in his journey. Heyborne dramatizes Nouri's struggles as he moves from one trial to another. Fans of spiritual fiction will find themselves in the thrall of an experienced narrator who provides a compelling listening experience. M.R. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2015-07-15
What to make of a kid born with four ears? One thing's for sure: he's bound to listen. Novelist/screenwriter Golding (Benjamin's Gift, 1999, etc.) strains for significance and symbolic import with this yarn, a blend of fable and what Edward Said would surely call (and not as a compliment) orientalist fantasy, with The Other being strange and inscrutable but all-too-human for all that. With his four ears, "placed side by side, like pairs of matched seashells," Nouri Ahmad Mohammad ibn Mahsoud al-Morad can't help but be noticed for good and ill—and mostly for ill, since the superstitious inhabitants of his little village are naturally curious, and not in a complimentary way, about the kid. The hero has an unusual feature: check. The hero sets off on a heroic journey: check. The hero is misunderstood and feared: check. With a Joseph Campbell-worthy schematic, the kid heads off to the big city to find such fortunes as the djinns and deity will allow. Fortunately for the sage Nouri, he falls in with Sufis whose master sees in him the makings of a pretty cool dude. Followers with arcane knowledge: check, as Golding waxes encyclopedic: "Centered on the chanting of litanies and accompanied by the playing of music, the sema was deep at the heart of Sufi practice." Sema-antics aside, Nouri undergoes all sorts of adventures in quest of—well, that'd be telling, but suffice it to say that there are fraught moments throughout ("the look on Vishpar's face as the marauder ran him through was what remained in Nouri's heart as they carried him away"). There's a Life of Pi-ish tang to the whole enterprise, although, to his credit, Golding is the better writer, and he manages to avoid the worst of New Age treacliness. And, for whatever reason, there's lots of good eating throughout, complete with a glossary of food terms. For what hero wants to go hungry? A modest book with heroic pretentions likely to appeal most to the Sedona/Santa Fe set.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169090062
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 11/24/2015
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews