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Hamdi Abu Golayyel

    Hamdi Abu Golayyel est un écrivain égyptien dont l'œuvre explore souvent la vie des communautés nomades et rurales. Sa prose se distingue par son authenticité brute et un aperçu pénétrant des relations interpersonnelles et des pressions sociales. À travers des récits captivants, il explore les complexités de l'identité et le choc entre tradition et modernité. Son style unique capture l'essence de la vie en marge de la société, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective inhabituelle.

    The Men Who Swallowed the Sun
    • The Men Who Swallowed the Sun

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Abu Golayyel's gritty tale of two men's ill-conceived quest for a better life via the deserts of the Middle East and the cities of Europe is pure storytelling Two Bedouin men from Egypt's Western Desert seek to escape poverty through different routes. One--the intellectual, terminally self-doubting, and avowedly autobiographical Hamdi--gets no further than southern Libya's fly-blown oasis of Sabha, while his cousin--the dashing, irrepressible Phantom Raider--makes it to the fleshpots of Milan. The backdrop of this darkly comic and unsentimental story of illegal immigration is a brutal Europe and Muammar Gaddafi's rickety, rhetoric-propped Great State of the Masses, where "the Leader" fantasizes of welding Libyan and Egyptian Bedouin into a new self-serving political force, the Saad-Shin. Compelling and visceral, with a seductive, muscular irony, The Men Who Swallowed the Sun is an unforgettable novel of two men and their fellow migrants and the extreme marginalization that drives them.

      The Men Who Swallowed the Sun