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David Caute

    The Left in Europe since 1789
    The Decline of the West
    Collisions
    The Women's Hour
    Red List
    Fatima's Scarf
    • Fatima's Scarf

      • 560 pages
      • 20 hours of reading

      From his earliest years, Gamal Rahman was a troublemaker. Born in Cairo, the son of a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, Gamal began life by killing his mother in childbirth. As a journalist and tutor to the amorous daughters of President Sharaf, he found his vocation; the literary murder of presidents and princesses. Hostile to Islamic fundamentalism, Gamal finally extended his hitman's contract to God the ultimate literary commission.By the time The An Interview is published, Gamal is living in exile in England. Publicly damned and burned by incensed Muslims in the Yorkshire city of Bruddersford, his book generates communal upheaval. Racial tensions erupt. The local Labour Party becomes fiercely embroiled and long-standing alliances are shattered.Nasreen Hassani, trapped between old values and the modern quest for personal fulfillment, can no longer sustain her marriage. Children rebel against patriarchy, and Muslim girls, inspired by the fourteen-year-old Fatima, embark on a bitter strike to defend their right to wear the scarf of modesty in school. While the claims of women fuel the flames, young men embrace the Sons of Allah, dedicated to the execution of the apostate author Gamal Rahman.What should a writer owe to himself, and what to society? David Caute's new novel is a masterly penetration of the murderous conflict between Islam and Western values -- a novel of major importance for the modern world.

      Fatima's Scarf
    • A gripping history of the Security Service and its covert surveillance on British writers and intellectuals in the twentieth century.

      Red List
    • The Women's Hour

      • 276 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      So what really happened when Sidney Pyke, 60s hangover and darling of his students found himself alone in the university pool with Bess Hooper, militant feminist and Pyke's most vocal detractor, at the end of the women's hour? From the author of "The Decline of the West" and "Veronica".

      The Women's Hour