Sarmada is an isolated Druze village in the hills of southern Syria. It's a real place, though one wonders how many Sarmadans would recognise their home amid the fugue of fantastical stories that make up Fadi Azzam's debut novel. Azzam is a journalist who has spent the past few years based in Dubai. In this he resembles Rafi, his narrator, who runs into a woman from his Syrian hometown during a trip to Paris. After a stilted discussion of the merits of faith and reason she announces to a sceptical Rafi that she carries within herself the spirit of the victim of a Sarmadan honour killing. Returning to the village, Rafi picks up the threads of the murdered woman's story, and then the narrative expands in a ramshackle way to take in the wider community. Ramshackle and, it must be said, lubricious: among the magic realist conceits that enter the picture is an accursed beauty who takes to deflowering the town's male virgins after one too many of her fiancés drops dead. Heady stuff, but perhaps not for everyone.
GMT 21:05 2017 Thursday ,07 September
Spymaster George Smiley returns in new Le Carre novelGMT 07:09 2017 Monday ,14 August
Teenage Oman resident publishes novelGMT 13:08 2017 Saturday ,12 August
Book gives voice to Vietnam's strangled anger over warGMT 23:06 2017 Sunday ,23 July
ook about Nelson Mandela’s medical treatment stirs disputeGMT 20:16 2017 Thursday ,20 July
China's banned books fade from Hong KongGMT 13:36 2017 Saturday ,17 June
Amazon: from online bookseller to internet titanGMT 03:01 2017 Thursday ,11 May
'Public libraries, cheaper books needed to boostGMT 00:40 2017 Thursday ,11 May
A’Sharqiyah University observes World Book DayMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor