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Antiman : A Hybrid Memoir - Rajiv Mohabir

Antiman

A Hybrid Memoir

By: Rajiv Mohabir

Hardcover | 28 September 2021

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Winner of the Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing, Rajiv Mohabir's Antiman is a stunning hybrid memoir that blends literary genres to tackle questions of caste, ethnicity, and sexuality, and to explore the author's experiences as an Indo-Guyanese queer poet and immigrant to the United States.

Born in London to Guyanese Indian parents and immigrating to the United States when he was a toddler, Rajiv Mohabir's familial history is one of displacement and constant migration. His great grandparents were indentured laborers who worked on British sugar plantations after the (official) abolition of the slave trade in 1834. In South America, his parents were forced into Christianity and colonial education before moving to England. After growing up in Indian immigrant communities in the US, Mohabir is inspired by his own blended identity to approach his experiences in multiple genres.

Full of poetry, prose in distinctive dialects, myth, and family lore, Antiman is a song cycle in which Mohabir wanders the intersections of his stifled history. He returns to Varanasi, India a century after his ancestors left to work the sugar cane fields of the British colony and then to Orlando, Florida where he studies at the feet of his unlettered Aji. When he goes to New York City his cousin labels him "antiman," a Caribbean slur for queers. His kin show him the fraught side of consanguinity as he is outed to his extended, conservative Guyanese American family. His life changes forever.

Dawning the slur as a cloak, Mohabir moves to New York City to work as an ESL teacher and struggles, without family, to love his brownness in the city known as the second diaspora for Indians from the Caribbean: Queens. He discovers that the word means just that: anti-man, the man who beds men, a word that Mohabir moves into and upsets through his travails with fraught relationships. Throughout the journey, his family's ancient lore and epics haunt him at every crossroad, lead him into poetry, and ultimately reveal his own story woven into the legacies of myths and legends, the singing of epics, of exile, outings, connections, and desire.

Industry Reviews

Praise for Antiman:

Winner of the 2019 Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing

Finalist for the 2022 PEN Open Book Award

2022 LAMBDA Literary Awards Finalist - Gay Memoir/Biography

2021 Foreword INDIES Finalist - LGBTQ+ (Adult Nonfiction)

2022 Publishing Triangle Awards Finalist - Randy Shilts Award for Gay Nonfiction

"The stakes of Indo-Guyanese poet Rajiv Mohabir's passionate memoir Antiman are high from the start.... While the memoir richly explores an awakening to anti-colonial politics and a queer coming-of-age, its emotional core is the anguish of repeatedly being made to stand apart.... The memoir refuses genre. Instead, it invents its own radical, striking, fragmented form, which reflects Mohabir's efforts to mend himself.... His stunning original poetry flies abreast of translated Bhojpuri songs. Anti-colonial polemic enlivens prose about his quest for a place his fluid self might move within rigid lines of identity. Antiman makes its own way in American letters. Transfused with what Mohabir calls in his author's note, "the queerest magic" of his Aji's songs, it's an incomparable, hybrid account of self and family that defies expectations. Singular, fierce: That's the gorgeous sound of a bird taking flight."

-Anita Felicelli, The Washington Post

"Antiman ... moves across countries-India, Guyana, Canada, the U.S.-and genres- poetry, prose, myth, and family history-to tell the story of his experience growing up across cultures and wanting to learn more about the Hindu history his family, living as Guyanese Indian immigrants in Florida, left behind. He reckons with racism, with homophobia (the title is a Caribbean slur for a man who loves men), and with a pervasive feeling of being an outsider. With tenacity and exuberance, and dancing between a number of languages and dialects, Mohabir comes to claim his own identity, finding firmer footing in the world."

-Nina MacLaughlin, The Boston Globe

"Mohabir carves a vessel to contain his multitudes using the instruments of prose, song, poetry, "In this searing, unflinching investigation of diaspora, heritage, and personal evolution, Rajiv Mohabir has fashioned a blues that blurs the boundaries of genre, a book-song that haunts and resonates. Antiman is a potent, lyrical fusion of harmony, dissonance, and recognizance. Music lives on every page."

-Jabari Asim, author of Yonder and We Can't Breathe

"Mohabir, here, carves a vessel to contain his multitudes using the instruments of prose, song, poetry, and prayer. Authentic and defiant, this memoir responds to erasure with assertion, to derogation with reclamation, and to fragmentation with relation. Fans of Ocean Vuong, Alexander Chee, and Saeed Jones will adore this book!"

-Serena Morales, Books Are Magic (Brooklyn, NY)

"In his gorgeous and experimental memoir, Antiman, Indo-Caribbean poet Rajiv Mohabir... delves into his family's history and its tangle of stigmas to locate a powerful literary heritage and the origins of his own artistic life.... Interspersing experiments in multilingual poetry among sections of conventional memoir, Antiman serves as both a touching account of the author's life and a bold statement of his poetics."

-Theo Henderson, Shelf Awareness, Starred Review

"Rajiv Mohabir's Antiman is a powerful portrait of the artist as a young, brown, immigrant, queer man and is my favorite kind of book, prose written by a poet.... This book stops time to celebrate voices worth remembering."

-Grace Talusan, author of The Body Papers

"Antiman won this year's Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing.... The book explores his family's legacy of displacement and also his own queerness. It's a mix of prose, poetry, songs, myths, and more. Antiman is as multi-faceted and multi-layered as its author."

-Rebecca Hussey, BookRiot Best Genre-Bending Nonfiction of 2021

"Antiman overflows with languages-English, Bhojpuri, and Creole-and with various forms of storytelling, including prose and poetry, journal entries, 'fauxtales,' transcriptions of recordings of his grandmother, definitions, and 'misreadings.' This multiplicity of genres enriches the book and allows the reader to experience the various worlds Mohabir inhabits.... Not quite a coming out story, Antiman is an illuminating 'hybrid memoir,' a record of Mohabir's coming to terms with himself, discovering who he is, and his embrace of multiple communities and cultures."

-Reginald Harris, The Gay and Lesbian Review

"Told in sentences charged with beauty and rage, we get an unapologetic account of a life that thrums in our veins, building to a drumbeat that starts in the Caribbean and explodes into the world."

-Krystal A. Sital, PEN award finalist author of Secrets We Kept: Three Women of Trinidad

"Rajiv Mohabir achieves a gorgeous, passionately lyrical 'hybrid' of a memoir-mosaic, sojourning through straightforward narrative, multifold geographies and legacies, and evocative (and provocative) vulnerable reflections, all infused with a deeply yearning poetical heartbeat. Antiman lives, breathes, and dances in unbridled joy."

-Thomas Glave, author of The Torturer's Wife

"In Antiman, Rajiv Mohabir sets forth on a journey with few parallels in the history of immigrant literature. While tracing his ancestors' peripatetic migrations from rural India to Guyana to Canada and the US, Mohabir examines both the bonds and disconnects between his American identity as a gay poet with the expectations and limitations of his diverse cultural inheritance.... More than a memoir, this brave and beautiful book is a tale of the resilience of the human heart, and of multiple family journeys across generations and four continents. With great intelligence and insight, Mohabir tackles questions of caste, ethnicity, and sexuality, spinning tales of tenderness and ignorance, of love and of longing for that mysterious place called home."

-Terry Hong, Hector Tobar, and Ilan Stavans, from the Prize Judges' Citation

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