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Egyptian Writers

Last week, The Millions posted a very interesting piece by Pauls Toutonghi entitled Toutonghi opens by describing a very common problem:

In Cairo, in March, the city had a surplus of intellectual energy. Literature, it seemed, might just be at the vanguard of Egypt鈥檚 social change. [. . .]

I spent an afternoon at the Cairo鈥檚 Diwan Bookstore, talking to writers about their hopes 鈥 and anxieties 鈥 about the future. Just across the 6th of October Bridge in the Zemalek neighborhood, Diwan had an extensive collection of contemporary Egyptian novels, essays, and short stories. I bought a half-dozen books.

When I returned to to Portland, Oregon 鈥 I noticed the conspicuous absence of these books on the shelves of my city. Even at Powell鈥檚, arguably the greatest (and largest) independent bookstore in the country, I couldn鈥檛 find Mansoura Ez Eldin鈥檚 first novel, the critically acclaimed, widely read Maryam鈥檚 Maze.

He then goes on to name 6 Egyptian authors—none of whom are named Naguib Mahfouz—including these two, which sound interesting to me:

2. Mansoura Ez Eldin. A journalist, activist, and writer, Ez Eldin has published two novels. One, the slender volume, Maryam鈥檚 Maze, is a masterpiece of imagination and literary form. Her story, 鈥滵茅j脿 Vu,鈥 was also featured in Emerging Arab Voices 鈥 the bilingual reader published by Saqi Books in April of this year.

Ez Eldin鈥檚 account of the first days of the revolution appeared in The New York Times, in late January of this year 鈥 weeks before Mubarak鈥檚 resignation. 鈥淪ilence is a crime,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淓ven if the regime continues to bombard us with bullets and tear gas, continues to block Internet access and cut off our mobile phones, we will find ways to get our voices across to the world, to demand freedom and justice.鈥

Maryam鈥檚 Maze tackles the issues so central to the experience of modernity in a metropolis like Cairo: Isolation, pollution, bureaucracy, madness. Awakening 鈥 like Kafka鈥檚 Gregor Samsa 鈥 in a world that she no longer recognizes, Maryam struggles to regain any semblance of her former life. It is a haunting book.

and

4. Muhammad Aladdin. A young lion of the Cairo literary scene, Aladdin began his career as a graphic novelist 鈥 publishing the youth-oriented, serial zine, Maganin (Mad People). Possessed of a mordant sense of humor 鈥 as well as an occasional passionate earnestness 鈥 Aladdin has begun publishing his work in American magazines.

His story, 鈥淣ew Lover, Young Lover,鈥 appeared in The Cairo Portfolio in Issue 9 of A Public Space.

During the height of the revolution, Aladdin kept his friends apprised of his situation with his trademark wit: 鈥淗ello, am fine, just five rubber bullets in my leg but nothing serious.鈥

Only 31 years old, Aladdin has published five novels and over a dozen short stories.

You’ll have to for write-ups on the other four.



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