2007 books

Oct 10, 2007 09:00




87) Naguib Mahfouz, The Day the Leader was Killed, 1985
Goings-on in a middle class Cairo family in the months before the assassination of Anwar al-Sadat in October 1981. The book has three narrators: Randa, constantly at the receiving end of her bad decisions, her indecisive fiancé Elwan, and his mischievous, sloganeering grandfather Muhtashimi; this triad of viewpoints each reflect the national despair at Sadat's open-door economic policy which wreaked havoc in the everyday lives of Egyptians. There's a great deal of irony to be found in their self-confessed impotence even though there are millions more far worse off than themselves, and their preoccupation with their own small problems and desires comes to an unexpected head for Elwan in a way that simultaneously reflects the emergency situation facing the nation. The Day the Leader was Killed has political undercurrents but at its heart is soap opera, enjoyable nonetheless.

naguib mahfouz, 2007 books, fiction, nobel laureates, egypt

Previous post Next post
Up