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Women of Karantina
A Novel
Translated by Robin Moger
308 Pages, 6.00 x 9.00 in
- Paperback
- 9789774166624
- February 2015
- Region: Worldwide
$18.95
LE200.00
£14.99
- EPUB
- 9781617976155
- September 2014
- Region: Worldwide
$17.99
- 9781617976162
- September 2014
- Region: Worldwide
$17.99
Where To Buy:
Back in the dog days of the early twenty-first century a pair of lovebirds fleeing a murder charge in Cairo pull in to Alexandria’s main train station. Fugitives, friendless, their young lives blighted at the root, Ali and Injy set about rebuilding, and from the coastal city’s arid soil forge a legend, a kingdom of crime, a revolution: Karantina.
Through three generations of Grand Guignol insanity, Nael Eltoukhy’s sly psychopomp of a narrator is our guide not only to the teeming cast of pimps, dealers, psychotics, and half-wits and the increasingly baroque chronicles of their exploits, but also to the moral of his tale. Defiant, revolutionary, and patriotic, are the rapists and thieves of Alexandria’s crime families deluded maniacs or is their myth of Karantina—their Alexandria reimagined as the once and future capital—what they believe it to be: the revolutionary dream made brick and mortar, flesh and bone?
Subversive and hilarious, deft and scalpel-sharp, Eltoukhy’s sprawling epic is a masterpiece of modern Egyptian literature. Mahfouz shaken by the tail, a lunatic dream, a future history that is the sanest thing yet written on Egypt’s current woes.
Nael Eltoukhy is an Egyptian writer and journalist, born in Kuwait in 1978. He graduated from the Hebrew Department in Ain Shams University, Cairo in 2000. His first collection of short stories was published in 2003, and he is the author of four novels. He has also translated two books from Hebrew into Arabic.
Robin Moger studied Egyptology and Arabic at Oxford University before working as a journalist in Cairo for six years. He is the translator of A Dog with No Tail by Hamdi Abu Golayyel (AUC Press, 2009) and his translation for Writing Revolution (2013) won the 2013 English PEN Award for outstanding writing in translation. He lives in Cape Town, South Africa.
"There is no doubt that you will encounter much hilarity here, in Nael Eltoukhy's Women of Karantina it is as enjoyable as a cold drink when thirsty . . . [and uses] humor that is critical, sarcastic, and extremely clever."—al-Tahrir
"Women of Karantina is a totally different experience. Although a lot of its dialogue and details draw on Egyptian life in recent decades, it is ruled by a logic entirely of its own that coherently pulls the reader into its world."—al-Mudun
"Darkly funny. . . [Eltoukhy] simultaneously revels in and mourns the dark underbelly of Alexandria, where the locals live and fight. This is a side of Alexandria that is hardly glimpsed, let alone explored with Eltoukhy's brand of incisive humor."—Chicago Tribune
"An exciting and original work, which represents and important contribution to contemporary Egyptian and Arab Literature."—Banipal
"Peopled with believable characters doing unbelievable things, and written with a light, satirical touch"—Financial Times