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Ahdaf Soueif

    March 23, 1950

    Ahdaf Soueif is an Egyptian novelist and commentator whose work delves into nuanced readings of Egyptian history and politics, often exploring the Palestinian experience through both fiction and non-fiction. Though she writes primarily in English, her Arabic-speaking readers find echoes of their native tongue within her prose. Beyond her literary contributions, Soueif is a significant cultural and political voice, recognized for her insightful commentary and her role in initiating literary festivals. Her writing offers a distinctive perspective, weaving personal reflection with broader social and political observation.

    Aisha
    The map of love
    In the Eye of the Sun
    Mezzaterra
    Mezzaterra: Fragments from the Common Ground
    Cairo
    • 2014

      Cairo

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      3.9(14)Add rating

      The story of the revolution and a personal journey into the city of Ahdaf Soueif's childhood

      Cairo
    • 2007

      I think of you

      • 180 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.2(30)Add rating

      Selected stories from her previous books Sandpiper and Aisha collected together for the first time

      I think of you
    • 2006

      Baghdad Burning

      Girl Blog from Iraq

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      In 'Baghdad Burning', a young Iraqi woman, using the pseudonym Riverbend, gives a human face to war and occupation. In this hard-hitting journal, she describes the day-to-day realities of life in post-war Iraq, which for her family and neighbours means regular power-cuts, bombings, kidnappings and raids.

      Baghdad Burning
    • 2005

      Exploring themes of Arab identity, art, and politics, this collection of essays delves into the concept of mezzaterra, or common ground, amidst globalization. The author, known for the Booker Prize finalist The Map of Love, provides an incisive perspective on the complexities of cultural intersections and the shared experiences that shape contemporary society. Through thoughtful analysis, the essays aim to foster understanding and dialogue in a rapidly changing world.

      Mezzaterra: Fragments from the Common Ground
    • 2004

      Mezzaterra

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Collected essays and journalism from one of our foremost writers: from cultural commentary to the war in Iraq

      Mezzaterra
    • 2000

      In 1900 Lady Anna Winterbourne travels to Egypt where she falls in love with Sharif, and Egyptian Nationalist utterly committed to his country's cause. A hundred years later, Isabel Parkman, an American divorcee and a descendant of Anna and Sharif, goes to Egypt, taking with her an old family trunk, inside which are found notebooks and journals which reveal Anna and Sharif's secret.

      The map of love
    • 1999
    • 1997

      Sandpiper

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      From the Man Booker Nominee author of The Map of Love. Sandpiper is a collection of stories which provide insight into Egyptian and Western life and the links between them, looking at relationships within and across continents. People from many places - England, Alexandria, Istanbul - pass through defining crises in their relations with others. Most of them are women, and most find themselves in countries other than their own, where language, culture and prescribed emotions such as 'love' create confusion. New understandings are registered in intensely recalled moments and sensations.

      Sandpiper
    • 1995

      Aisha

      • 194 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.5(212)Add rating

      By the author of In The Eye Of The Sun, this superb collection of stories is united by the central character, an Egyptian girl growing up in both Egypt and Britain. The stories are populated by the characters she meets, each moving in their own world as Aisha grows up and travels in Cairo and London.

      Aisha