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English edition
Sep
2004
254 pp.
Paperback
12.5X20 cm
$16.95
LE 75.00
ISBN 978 977 424 872 6
For sale only in the Middle East
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Zayni Barakat
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Gamal al-Ghitani
Translated by
Farouk Abdel Wahab
Foreword by
Edward W. Said
“In the course of my long travels I have never seen a city so devasteated. After a long time I ventured out into the streets. Death, cold and heavy, hung in the air. Walls have no value here, doors have been eliminated. No one is certain that they will see another day.”
The Egypt of the Mamluk dynasty witnessed a period of artistic ostentation and social and political upheaval, at the heart of which lay the unsolved question of the ruler’s legitimacy. Now, in 1516, the Mamluk reign is coming to an end with the advance of the invading Ottomans. The numerous narrators, among them a Venetian traveler and several native Muslims, tell the story of the rise to power of the ruthless, enigmatic, and puritanical governor of Cairo, Zayni Barakat ibn Musa, whose control of the corrupt city is effected only through a complicated network of spies and informers.
Gamal al-Ghitani was born in 1945 and educated in Cairo. He has written 13 novels and 6 collections of short stories. He is currently editor-in-chief of the literary review Akhbar al-adab.
Farouk Abdel Wahab teaches Arabic language and literature at the University of Chicago. Among his recent translations from Arabic are Ibrahim Abdel Meguid’s The Other Place and No One Sleeps in Alexandria (AUC Press, 1997 and 1999).
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Reviews
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Recommended by Lonely Planet
"... A gripping, unforgettable work of prose fiction. It displays its author's originality of conception and execution at every step."—Edward Said, in his Foreword to the book
"Whether read as a colorful evocation of past times or as a bleak political parable, Zayni Barakat succeeds brilliantly."—Robert Irwin, Times Literary Supplement
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