Description
Description
August Book Sense Pick
A fading aristocrat and self-proclaimed 'scientist of women.' A purring, voluptuous siren. A young shop-girl enduring the clammy touch of her boss and hating herself for accepting the modest banknotes he tucks into her pocket afterward. An earnest, devout young doorman, feeling the irresistible pull toward fundamentalism. A cynical, secretly gay newspaper editor, helplessly in love with a peasant security guard. A roof-squatting tailor, scheming to own property. A corrupt and corpulent politician, twisting the Koran to justify taking a mistress.
All live in the Yacoubian Building, a once-elegant temple of Art Deco splendor slowly decaying in the smog and hubbub of downtown Cairo, Egypt. In the course of this unforgettable novel, these disparate lives converge, careening inexorably toward an explosive conclusion. Tragicomic, passionate, shockingly frank in its sexuality, and brimming with an extraordinary, embracing human compassion, The Yacoubian Building is a literary achievement of the first order.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"A bewitching political novel of contemporary Cairo that is also an engagé novel about sex, a romantic novel about power and a comic yet sympathetic novel about the vagaries of the human heart. Even the least politically oriented reader will find it engrossing." -- New York Times Book Review
"All novels contain invisible cities, even those set in actual metropolises. Ulysses does not unfold in Ireland but in James Joyce's mind. The same goes for the sprawling, heaving Cairo depicted in Alaa Al Aswany's tremendously likable new novel. . . . Occasionally it seems as if an indiscreet superintendent, jangling keys and all, is taking us around the Yacoubian Building, whispering about secrets hushed up. This vision of life connects high with low, rich with poor, through shared vices and needs." -- John Freeman, San Francisco Chronicle
"[L]ike the late Naguib Mahfouz, Alaa Al Aswany is a world writer, making Egyptian concerns into human ones and beautifully illuminating our always extraordinary and sometimes sad and baffling world." -- The Times (London)
"[A] hilarious, sensual, bawdy and beautiful novel." -- Nerve
"There's some real human tragedy (and comedy) at play here, and the panorama you get of a nation on edge is an eye-opener." -- Seattle Times
"[A] frank and hilarious soap opera set to an Arabic beat." -- Minneapolis Star Tribune
"No other Egyptian, or Arab writer for that matter, has so boldly broken through the literary stagnation of the last 50 years by addressing these themes. Except perhaps Naguib Mahfouz, the Nobel Laureate who penned the Cairo Trilogy in the 1950s." -- Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Foreign Policy Magazine
"With its interlocking vignettes and intertwining characters, Alaa al-Aswany's hip and racy novel creates a complex narrative of contemporary Egyptian life." -- Kaelen Wilson-Goldie, The Daily Star (Beirut)
"Richly peppered with complex characters. . . . A provocative survey of the social and political pressures of the present that has many Egyptians looking nostalgically to their more tolerant and hopeful past." -- Lisa Ko, author of The Leavers
"Captivating and controversial .. . .an amazing glimpse of modern Egyptian society and culture." -- New York Review of Books
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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