“The Beat poets stoned in Mexico were all María Sabina’s visionary children.”—Lawrence Ferlinghetti, co-founder of City Lights Booksellers
“Imagine a batch of Holy Children (i.e., magic mushrooms) colliding with a batch of unholy Beatniks in a remote part of Mexico. Such a collision resulted in this simultaneously surreal, lyrical, comic, and brutal Mexican novel expertly translated by Chloe Garcia Roberts.”—Lawrence Millman, author of The Last Speaker of Bear
“Maria Sabina—great seer and poet of Indigenous Mexico and the world—sets the ground in this powerful fantasy of worlds in alignment and collision. Sabina’s ritual litanies meet Beat seekers of trance and travel, and one thinks of the ecstatic litanies of Ginsberg’s ‘Howl.’ The transcendent poetry and vocal elements in Homero Aridjis’s rich book of consociational poetic Time and sacred Space keep the universe aspin. What a great conjoining.”—Anne Waldman, author of Fast Speaking Woman
“One of Latin America’s finest pens, the book we’ve all been waiting for! Aridjis renders a true-to-life portrait of the mysterious curandera whose name has become synonymous with the medicine of ‘magic’ mushrooms and 1960s hippie counterculture. A woman, small in stature but immense in reputation, from the mountains of Oaxaca, who has captured the global and cultural imagination for more than half a century, María Sabina, is depicted here with the grace and reverence her legacy deserves, while at the same time raising questions about the appropriation that has long been a pastime of norteamericanos seeking an ethnic—and dare I say, magical—experience south of the border. Only a novelist, poet, and environmentalist of Aridjis’s skill and position could handle such a delicate subject and make it a compelling read. And this careful translation offered by Chloe Garcia Roberts wholly elevates the textual and visual experience of Aridjis’s writing. What an achievement! What a story!”—Tim Z. Hernandez, author of They Call You Back
“Carne de Dios re-creates the world of Mazatec poet and shaman María Sabina (1894–1985), whose mushroom ceremonies brought the U.S. Beat generation to Mexico in search of esoteric knowledge, drugs, and sex. Homero Aridjis, Mexico’s greatest living poet, overturns much of the mythology surrounding Beat mysticism as it comes face-to-face with an ancient spiritual tradition. This artful and accomplished translation brings Aridjis’s vision to life and captures the extraordinary power and insight of his poetics so well that the reader may wonder if they, too, are hallucinating as they read.”—James López, University of Tampa
— -