Product details
- ISBN 9781649033239
- Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
- Publication Date: 27 May 2025
- Publisher: American University in Cairo Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Winner of the Naguib Mahfouz Medal for Literature
"Few writers possess Fatma's boldness”—The New Arab
An urgent and raw confessional of memory and family and all that is lost and won in one woman's lifetime
The discovery of an old tin of chocolates, its contents long ago devoured, marks the entry into this intimate story that reaches back through a lifetime of memories in search of self and home, with the relationship between mother and daughter at its core.
Fatma Qandil describes, in startling and immersive prose, growing up in a middle-class Egyptian family, the youngest child and witness to their declining fortunes. Spanning the 1960s to the present day, her happy childhood melts away to reveal the fecklessness of her selfish older brothers, her father’s addiction, her mother’s illness, and the violence and many deaths, both literal and figurative, that she endures.
In both celebration and suffering, and through triumph and disappointment, her voice is unflinching, revealing both a determination to speak the truth and a poetic sensitivity that is disarming. Recipient of the Naguib Mahfouz Medal for Literature, this fictional debut marks the arrival of a stunning new voice.
Fatma Qandil (Author) is an Egyptian author, poet, playwright, and translator, and was born in 1958. She is associate professor (emerita) in the Department of Arabic at Helwan University in Cairo and deputy editor-in-chief of Fusul, a magazine of literary criticism. She has published numerous collections of poetry, works of literary criticism, and translations into Arabic, and her nonfiction has been translated into many languages worldwide. Empty Cages (Aqfas farigha) is her first novel. She currently lives in Cairo, Egypt.
Adam Talib (Translated by) is associate professor in the Department of Arab and Islamic Civilizations at the American University in Cairo, co-editor of the journal Middle Eastern Literatures, and a scholar of classical Arabic poetry. His translation with Katharine Halls of Raja Alem's The Dove's Necklace was awarded the Sheikh Hamad Award. He is also the translator of Khairy Shalaby's The Hashish Waiter (Hoopoe, 2018) and Mekkawi Said's Cairo Swan Song (Hoopoe, 2019.)
