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The Doves Necklace

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
When the body of a young woman is discovered in the Lane of Many Heads, an alley in modern-day Mecca, no one will claim it, as they are ashamed of her nakedness. As Detective Nasser pursues his investigation of the case, seemingly all of Mecca chimes in—including the Lane of Many Heads itself—in this "surreal, meditative take on a murder mystery" (The Guardian, Best Books of Summer). Nasser initially suspects that the dead woman is Aisha, one of the residents of the area, and searches her emails for clues. The world she paints embraces everything from crime and religious extremism to the exploitation of foreign workers by a mafia of building contractors, who are destroying the historic areas of the city. Another view reveals the city through the eyes of Yusuf, Aisha's neighbor, increasingly frustrated by the accelerating pace of change. As gripping as classic noir, nuanced as a Nabokov novel, and labyrinthine as the alleys of Mecca itself, this brilliant fever dream of a novel masterfully reveals a city and a civilization in all its contradictions, at once beholden to brutal customs and uneasily coming to terms with new traditions.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 25, 2016
      Alem, the first woman to win the International Prize for Arabic Fiction, blends surrealism and mystery in this challenging novel, which opens with the Lane of Many Heads taking on narrative duty (“I am that narrow alley in Mecca, off the highway where pilgrims make their ablutions and don their white robes”). No impartial observer, the lane expresses strong emotion, as when complaining about being saddled with an “overpopulated, head butt–evoking name.” The discovery of the nude corpse of a woman named Azza in the lane leads detective Nasser al-Qahtani to investigate. Nasser, who has survived a traumatic childhood, is still haunted by witnessing his father murder his sister, a crime covered up at the time. Alem (Fatma) is most successful at depicting the despair of the neighborhood, one whose residents “kneaded and fermented its excrement so that they could get drunk on methane,” but fans of traditional whodunits should be prepared for a meandering plot.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from November 1, 2016

      The discovery of the naked body of a young woman in an alley in Mecca has Nassar, the investigating detective, confronting painful memories of the honor killing of his own sister by their father. Deeply held beliefs conflict with modern life in this provocative mystery, which earned its author the International Prize for Arabic Fiction, making her the first woman to be so honored.

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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