Okey
Ndibe’s razor-sharp “Foreign Gods, Inc.” steps into the story of a
Nigerian-born New Yorker called Ike, just as everything in his life has begun
to go horribly wrong. The only thing worse than Ike’s present situation is the
plan he makes to remedy it.
Ike,
whose name is correctly pronounced EE-kay, has an Amherst degree cum laude in
economics. But his accent has kept him from finding a job. So he works as a
cabby, with customers who call him “Eekay,” which means “buttocks” in Igbo. He
has made a bad marriage to a woman who walked off with his savings, and debts
now overwhelm him. The only thing he has of value is something of age-old
mystical significance that is not exactly in his possession. And, intellect
notwithstanding, he gets the bright idea of acquiring and selling it from a
trendy article in New York magazine.
A friend
sends Ike the article about an art gallery called Foreign Gods Inc., which
gives this book its terrifically apt title. Only in mimicking a slick American
idiom does Mr. Ndibe falter, and that’s probably to his credit. (From the fake
New York magazine: “ ‘A summons to heaven doesn’t come easy or cheap,” says a
gallery patron, referring to the place’s most expensive upper floor.”) But the
gist of the piece is that a dealer named Mark Gruels traffics in deities from
faraway places, which mean nothing but money to either him or his customers. As
the book begins, Ike arrives at the gallery to see a tanned woman holding a
squat statue to her breast, leaving Foreign Gods and getting into her BMW.
Ike is
desperate enough to believe that Gruels will pay big money for Ngene, the
powerful war god that presided over the Nigerian region where he was raised.
Mr. Ndibe has his own memories of war to draw upon: He grew up in the midst of
the Biafran war and was a Nigerian journalist and academic before coming to the
United States, as a protégé of Chinua Achebe. He has had a distinguished
teaching career and is the author of one earlier novel, “Arrows of Rain”
(2000). But “Foreign Gods, Inc.,” which arrives early in January, will still
have the impact of an astute and gripping new novelist’s powerful debut.
Not far
into the book, Ike is on his way back to Nigeria with only one plan in mind: to
steal what he thinks is an inanimate object and bring it back to New York. That
scheme alone is evidence of how far he has strayed from his roots, and how much
of a re-education awaits him.
At first,
he is simply struck by the physical changes to his native land: Where did all
those zinc-roofed concrete buildings with satellite dishes come from? But then
the sense memories of the place begin to seduce him, and he falls into a swoon
of reminiscence that would be enchanting, if it were not constantly interrupted
by the harsh realities of his relatives and former neighbors.
Ngene the
war god plays some mysterious role in all of this. Much of the village’s
hardship dates back to the disruptive visit of a British missionary who was
determined to teach the superiority of Christianity to Nigerian pagans. Even
this takes the form of materialism, as the increasingly mad Englishman,
Stanton, insists that his God is more powerful because he owns everything,
while the Nigerian gods possess nothing. Nothing but the hearts and minds of
their followers.
Stanton
is gone, but in his wake he left bitter divisiveness and a terrible conflation
of religion and greed. So Ike returns to find that his mother, who for years
has had Ike’s sister bombard him with plaintive, begging letters (“Mama wonders
if you want us to eat sand”), has fallen under the spell of a pastor who sees
religious commitment in terms of dollar signs.
The
influence of America is everywhere, and so are its own foreign gods: Ike finds
impoverished Nigerian kids watching old reruns of Michael Jordan playing
basketball, talking about what they would do if they were as rich and widely
worshiped as he once was. They’d buy houses. Cars. Shirts with brand names on
them. And pizza, even though not one of these kids has ever tasted it. They’ve
just seen people eat it on American TV, and the people look happy after they
do.
Ike’s
journey through his past is so richly evocative that he and the reader may
almost forget what he went home to do. But by the time he turns his attention
to Ngene, whose high priest is Ike’s uncle, it’s clear that Ngene is more than
just a wooden artifact. The past has proved, to anyone who would take heed,
that Ngene is powerful, indestructible, vengeful and not easily subject to the
whims of others. So a great deal more than art dealing is at stake as Ike
enacts the final stage of his crazy, misbegotten plan.
Throughout
“Foreign Gods, Inc.,” Ike’s hard-won urban Americanness, the kind that allowed
him to drive a New York taxi, slowly evaporates. It is replaced by a more
primal, physical life, as he becomes more attuned to sounds and smells,
especially to the stinks of suffering, failure and fear.
Mr. Ndibe
invests his story with enough dark comedy to make Ngene an odoriferous presence
in his own right, and certainly not the kind of polite exotic rarity that art
collectors are used to. At one point, the novel compares him to the demonic
Baal, and Ngene shows many signs of wishing to live up to that reputation. In
Mr. Ndibe’s agile hands, he’s both a source of satire and an embodiment of pure
terror.
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