A powerful and beautiful Syrian novel set in Aleppo during the early days of the civil war that followed the Arab Spring.
Faysal Khartash is a leading Syrian author. He lives in
his native Aleppo, has written several novels and works as a
schoolteacher while contributing to Syrian newspapers.
Max Weiss teaches the history of the modern Middle East at
Princeton University. He has translated books by Nihad Sirees,
Dunya Mikhail and Samar Yazbek.
A masterful distillation of one of the great tragedies of the
twenty-first century, as stripped of artifice and sentimentality as
it is undergirded with insight and empathy. Roundabout of Death is
essential reading
*Dan Mayland, author of The Doctor of Aleppo*
A brilliant, kaleidoscopic and claustrophobic portrayal of the
Syrian civil war. Khartash's spare prose eloquently conveys horrors
that require no rhetorical elevation. This is a fine book that
deserves a wide readership, both on its own merits and because the
Syrian disaster is by no means over
*Jonathan Spyer, author of Days of the Fall: A Reporter's Journey
in the Syria and Iraq Wars*
Some books stand as monuments to wars from which they arise. This
is one of those books
*Elliot Ackerman, author of Green on Blue and Waiting for Eden*
A heartwrenching and shocking work of historical fiction, Faysal
Khartash's Roundabout of Death focuses on the human cost of Syria's
civil war... The novel follows Jumaa, an unemployed Arabic teacher
who struggles to live peacefully in a dangerous city... A powerful
novel that takes a humane view of Syria's devastation'
*Foreword Reviews*
Bleakly arresting... Readers are ushered into a landscape that
feels surreal but couldn't be more horrifically factual...
Heartbreaking in its matter-of-factness, Khartash's work delivers a
clear sense of life amid war in his book's brief span'
*Library Journal (starred review)*
The strength of Roundabout of Death lies in its credibility, and in
a specificity that defies detail. The BBC has declared the war in
Syria to be the most documented in history, but no one can
generalize from records of documentation alone. What we are left
with in this novel is the geography of Aleppo [...] as much a
character as Dublin is for James Joyce
*The Arts Fuse*
To read a novel, presumably partly autobiographical, written by a
Syrian author living in Aleppo amidst the city's destruction is a
moving experience... I feel I've been to Syria and got a glimpse of
what it's like to be living there as an ordinary person – and that
is an incredible gift'
*Five Books*
Khartash draws a protagonist who seeks only peace amid the bombs
and explosions around him. Roundabout of Death is a book for those
searching for new perspectives on an ongoing tragedy that continues
to impact the lives of many people today
*artmejournal*
News reports and images have exposed the horrors of the Syrian
crisis: millions of refugees, bombing and chemical weapons. But
this powerful novel makes the grim reality of survival through the
fierce fighting in Aleppo truly comprehensible
*Itamar Rabinovich, co-author of Syrian Requiem: The Civil War and
Its Aftermath*
Khartash's sparse and harrowing English-language debut offers an
account of life in Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War... Readers
will find this fragmented tale of war-torn Aleppo and its displaced
intellectuals chilling and insightful'
*Publishers Weekly*
A remarkable book, a vivid testimonial to the horrors of the Syrian
civil war
*Robert F. Worth, author of A Rage for Order: The Middle East in
Turmoil*
Masterful... Kaleidoscopic: personal and collective, serendipitous
and fatalistic, marked by a bitter irony that can't help flirting
with despair... What Khartash is tracking is the precariousness of
memory – and identity'
*Los Angeles Times*
Beautiful... Faysal Khartash's English-language debut brings to a
wider audience one of the best Syrian novelists of his generation
and one of the most exciting writers to emerge from the region
since the Arab Spring'
*TLS*
A searing, soaring firsthand account of the ravages war can
produce
*Dorset Living*
A sublime distillation of one of the tragedies of the early 21st
century
*Independent, 4 stars*
Short but deeply powerful novel... A searing, soaring firsthand
account of the ravages war can produce
*Tyne Valley Living*
A haunting elegy to a devastated city
*Mail on Sunday*
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