Winner of the Graywolf Press African Fiction Prize, a lush experimental novel about love as a weapon of empire.
Noor Naga is an Alexandrian writer and the author of a verse novel, Washes, Prays. She is a winner of the Bronwen Wallace Award, the RBC/PEN Canada Award, and the Disquiet Fiction Prize. She teaches at the American University in Cairo.
"Propulsive and philosophical. . . . The novel brims with sparkling
prose. Naga's sentences are precise and rich with bold, complex
observations. . . . [An] exhilarating debut."--Nadia Owusu, New
York Times Book Review "The prose is blazing, the politics nuanced,
and the honesty unflinching."--Tess Gunty, The Guardian (UK)
"Extraordinary."--Christine DeZelar-Tiedman, Library Journal,
starred review "Naga impresses with her snappy prose . . . and has
a gift for exploring varied perspectives. . . . This smart story is
distinguished by its surprising empathy."--Publishers Weekly "A
fascinating novel about class and abuse. . . . [Noor]Naga's writing
in the book's first two parts is gripping, but the final section,
metafictional and darkly funny, is an absolute master class. She
deals with important issues with a gimlet eye and a rare
sensitivity--it would be a massive understatement to call this
novel a must-read. In a word: brilliant."--Kirkus Reviews, starred
review "A masterclass in complex characters and incisive writing. .
. . [If An Egyptian Cannot Speak English] does justice to the
intricacy it explores. It is wholly captivating and will challenge
you in ways you don't see coming."--Manal Ahmed, F(r)iction "Sharp,
switched-on, and self-interrogating, If an Egyptian Cannot Speak
English masterfully continues, long after the last page is read, to
provoke uncomfortable yet essential questions about what we demand
from literature that represents otherness. . . . Inventive and
brilliant."--Dana Hansen, Chicago Review of Books "At once
romantic, complex, and ultimately tragic."--Booklist "In If an
Egyptian Cannot Speak English, Noor Naga finds a form for diasporan
consciousness: capacious enough to hold conflicting voices,
inventive enough to capture the dream state of life in translation,
supple enough to express varieties of heartbreak at the margins of
culture. Through a love story told at a breathless pace, Naga
evokes breath: the presence of living bodies, whose silence
surrounds all novels, never quite caught on the page. This is a
book for anyone who's ever been mesmerized by language, amazed and
stricken by what it can and cannot do."--Sofia Samatar "Noor Naga's
language combines precision with extraordinary suggestiveness.
Reading this book is like stepping through an open doorway and
realizing that a sparkling zodiac of colorful expressions lies
another small step away. One has the impulse to keep going and to
stop only to wave someone else to hurry along."--Ato Quayson
"Through exquisite invention and a tightly woven form, Noor Naga
brings us into the colliding spaces of cultural duality met by the
perennial struggles of people attempting to reconcile with one
another and themselves. With the backdrop of a Cairo in perpetual
chaos and the aftermath of the Egyptian revolution, here are two
young Egyptians, each from one side of the Atlantic, trying to find
meaning amidst a conception of nation and belonging that seems to
have all but dissipated. Beyond attempting to come to terms with
one's identity, these nameless characters are in search of
revelation. If An Egyptian Cannot Speak English is fixated on
complexities that define how we come to understand ourselves, and
our striving to grapple with desire and yearning while also being
beholden to one another. Enthralling and nuanced, this is a novel
by a writer whose powers are just becoming known."--Matthew Shenoda
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