A dizzying experience... like Dante entering hell through a rip in the universe, Makoha enters history, accompanied not by Virgil but by a Black Icarus with a microchip for a mouth, and the shade of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat -- Philip Terry * Guardian * It's easy to focus on Makoha's formal ingenuity... far harder to map the astonishing horizons these tools enable... The book's preoccupaitons with flight, Icarus, and stargazing are only the surface artefacts of a visceral, unrelenting, internal odyssey -- Dave Coates * Poetry Book Society * I found a wealth of history, culture, thinking and art in this book... there is humour and sensuality in these poems too, as well as romance, real or sometimes imaginary.. Makoha switches with ease between the lyrical, factual and conversational; his language is absolutely stunning... I am grateful to a poet with such range and ambition, who refuses to settle for anything less than a whole, interrelated picture -- Maria Jastrzebska * Writer's Mosaic * Makoha conveys a different way of seeing and experiencing, part collision course, part fever dream, often removing the parameters of a conventional narrative or field of study, so that academic registers, mathematical concepts, musical notation, and the speakers tangential thoughts and metaphors rush into the field of the poem, hijacking the readers continuous experience of the text Makohas experiments with form and his use of interruption and redirection challenge the borders of the poem, and at its best provide the blueprint for a burgeoning disruptive aesthetic that at times recklessly and thrillingly flies too close to the sun -- Zakia Carpenter-Hall * Jhalak Review * Extraordinary... Makoha is a bracing, challenging, agile poet his writing is reminiscent of Aime Cesaire, in its powerful symbolism, but touched with the surreal edge of Nathaniel Mackey, the exhilarating shooting-for-the stars invention of Will Alexander... Makoha creates space for imagination and interpretation throughout, and in doing so he opens up the possibility of the disruption of the continuity of history for something else to be imagined into being -- Nick Moss * Culture Matters * A moving collection of entangled histories. Makohas poems break, cut, scratch and sample with heightened language to remake and renew the boundaries of myth. Do not sleep on The New Carthaginians -- Raymond Antrobus One of our most daring and original poets, Nick Makoha has channelled the wild energies of Basquiats art into this essential new collection. These are poems layered with potent coordinates from African and world history, alongside the sensations of a Black Icarus in headlong flight, to create a new mythology all their own. Churning with codes, enigmas, unforgettable images, this is poetry that resonates with an emotive power that lies beyond immediate comprehension -- Sarah Howe * T.S. Eliot Prize-winning poet of Loop of Jade * Just as Basquiat reinvented painting by experimenting with different methods of expression, so too does Nick Makoha. The New Carthaginians embarks on a poetic odyssey where Basquiat's art, the flight of Icarus, the echoes of Entebbe's history, and the enigmatic codex converge in a mesmerising reinvention of ekphrasis and myth making -- Roger Robinson * T.S. Eliot Prize-winning author of A Portable Paradise * A work thats ingenious and bold in its formal daring. In this book, Nick Makoha has found an otherworldly, visionary voice and diction that arrest you from the first page and never let you go. Playful and sparkling with wonder, his dizzying linguistic pyrotechnics, replete with absurdist brushstrokes, remind me of the lyricism of Sony Labou Tansi: intoxicating, a world all its own in the fabric of language -- Jason Allen-Paisant * TS Eliot prize-winning author of Self-Portrait as Othello * Nick Makoha's second collection invents a new kind of time. A poet always deeply engaged with the project of developing fresh terms, fresh language for hitherto unacknowledged narratives, in The New Carthaginians Makoha further realises his aims. He blends his own personal story, and the history within which that story is embedded, with others' artistic journeysmost particularly Basquiat, but we find Bruce Willis and Batman here tooto create a unique, resonant mythology -- Erica Wagner * consulting editor for Harper's Bazaar and contributing writer for The New Statesman *