Synopses & Reviews
In a searching and powerful debut memoir, award-winning poet and literary translator Ani Gjika tells a different kind of immigrant story by writing about the ways a woman listens to her own body, intuition, and desire.
Ani Gjika was born in Albania and came of age just after the fall of Communism, a time in which everyone had a secret to keep and young women were afraid to walk down the street alone. When her family immigrates to America, Gjika finds herself far from the grandmother who helped raise her, grappling with a new language, and isolated from aging parents who are trying in their own ways to survive. Then she meets a young man whose mind leans toward writing as hers does, and Ani falls in love — at least, she thinks it's love.
Set across four countries — Albania, Thailand, India, and the U.S. — An Unruled Body tells the story of a young woman's journey to selfhood through the lenses of language, sexuality, and identity, and how she learned to find freedom of expression on her own terms.
Review
"A poignant literary and personal achievement." Booklist (Starred Review)
Review
"An Unruled Body paints a new portal of entry into the role of the nation in the multiple layers of our experiences with consent and sensuality. Ani Gjika makes us remember that these pages, and this memoir, are made for feeling our way through the chaos while making memories of pleasure and resistance." Kiese Laymon, author of Heavy: An American Memoir<./em>
Review
"An Unruled Body compellingly draws readers along Gjika's journey toward sexual freedom, and the experience is breathtaking. At times meditative, and at times cinematic, Gjika writes about the intricacies of patriarchy, trauma, and sex with unflinching clarity and nuance, and an embodied sense of suspense that will keep your heart pounding." Jonathan Escoffery, author of If I Survive You
Review
"Ani Gjika has written a searing reminder that history lives in the body and a love letter to the power of language to restore us to ourselves. Beautiful, impactful, and deeply moving, An Unruled Body resonates far beyond its pages." Alex Marzano-Lesnevich, author of The Fact of a Body
About the Author
Albanian-born writer Ani Gjika is the author and literary translator of eight books and chapbooks of poetry, among them Bread on Running Waters (Fenway Press, 2013), a finalist for the 2011 Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize. Her translation from the Albanian of Luljeta Lleshanaku's Negative Space (New Directions and Bloodaxe Books, 2018) won an English PEN Award and was shortlisted for the International Griffin Poetry Prize, PEN America Award, and Best Translated Book Award. She is a graduate of Boston University's MFA program where she was a 2011 Robert Pinsky Global fellow, and GrubStreet's Memoir Incubator program, where she was a 2019 Pauline Scheer Fellow. Having taught creative writing at various universities in the U.S. and Thailand, Gjika currently teaches English as a Second Language at Framingham High School in Massachusetts.