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Book reviews

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  • A mosque in the evening light on the Bosphorus
    The animals of Istanbul – a literary homage

    A dog barks, a seagull mews

    Istanbul's kings and queens are its seagulls, the cats and dogs in its alleyways, the pigeons on Taksim Square. The city's animals are also an essential component of its literature. A new anthology of short stories by Turkish-language authors offers up a narrative tribute to the city's non-human inhabitants

  • Traffic chaos in the megacity of Karachi, Pakistan
    Africans in Pakistan

    Magical Karachi

    Juergen Wasim Frembgen's new book, "Bambasa Street", is a fascinating account of the traditions of the African diaspora in Pakistan's largest metropolis

  • Men and women, some wearing green Hamas scarves or holding up Hamas flags, point their right index fingers in the air at a rally in April 2022
    Book review: Joseph Croitoru on Hamas

    The dark power of the "liberators"

    How did Hamas come to rule over the Gaza Strip? And what developments led to 7 October? Historian Joseph Croitoru has the answers. His level-headed assessment of the facts lends this book a particular importance.

  • Default Image for Articles
    Kuzey Topuz and "Der Freund"

    The human as board game

    In her debut novel, "Der Freund" (The Friend), Kuzey Topuz has created a complex weave of fragments and perspectives. The book is all about power and influence in interpersonal relations and at a societal level. It's a masterstroke

  • Young women have been defying the Iranian regime's crackdown
    Iranian protest literature

    Ehtesham-Zadeh and the inner revolution

    "Zan", Suzi Ehtesham-Zadeh's short story collection, tells of Iranian women during the uprising in Iran, and of women in exile grappling in diverse ways with their identity and roots. A book about women, life and freedom that has arrived at exactly the right moment

  • Novelist Sherko Fatah
    Sherko Fatah's Great Wish

    A daughter estranged

    In his new novel "Der große Wunsch", award-winning author Sherko Fatah tells the story of a father whose daughter meets a supporter of IS and follows him to the Syrian war zone

  • Two people stand outside a mosque after paint was sprayed on the façade of the building the night before, Leipzig, Germany, 20 April 2017
    The discourse about Islam in German politics

    From open to latent Islamophobia

    Sociologist and Islamic studies expert Imad Mustafa was commissioned by the Group of Independent Experts on Islamophobia (UEM) to conduct the first academic study of the discourse around Islam in Germany's political parties. His findings have recently been published in book form

  • People carry an Israeli and a German flag that have been joined together during a rally in solidarity with Israel and against antisemitism, in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, 20 May 2021
    Daniel Marwecki on German–Israeli relations

    Behind the façade of "atonement"

    Historian Daniel Marwecki's 2020 book on the early years of German–Israeli relations has now been published in German under the title "Absolution? Israel und die deutsche Staatsräson". In it, the author describes these relations as a history of mutual interest-led politics

  • Robert Habeck, German minister for economic affairs and climate action (left), shakes hands with Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Qassim Al Abdullah Al Thani, Qatari minister of commerce and industry at a meeting in March 2022
    Arabian Peninsula

    Dawn of a new era in the Gulf

    Political scientist Sebastian Sons describes in his new book how societies on the Arabian Peninsula are undergoing multiple changes simultaneously as they search for a new identity

  • Their bodies might be displaced, torn away from homes and villages. Yet the memories of women and girls in Sheikha Helawy's short-story collection "They Fell Like Stars from the Sky" remain, haunting the spaces where they once lived.
    'They Fell Like Stars from the Sky'

    Sheikha Helawy's joyous, rebellious passions

    Their bodies might be displaced, torn away from homes and villages. Yet the memories of women and girls in Sheikha Helawy's short-story collection "They Fell Like Stars from the Sky" remain, haunting the spaces where they once lived. Marcia Lynx Qualey read the book

  • Migrants in the UK

    The world of London's others

    In "Auf dem Null Meridian", Shady Lewis tells the story of an immigrant in London who works in social services and whose life is turned upside down. With a light touch and black humour, he describes the tragic consequences of racism and Eurocentric thinking. Lisa Neal read the book for Qantara.de

  • In "Heimatlos mit drei Heimaten" – literally, 'homeless with three homes' – the historian and political scientist Aref Hajjaj illustrates his personal experiences from a life led between Palestine, Switzerland and Germany.
    The refugee's struggle for identity

    Homeless with three homes

    In "Heimatlos mit drei Heimaten" – literally, 'homeless with three homes' – the historian and political scientist Aref Hajjaj illustrates his personal experiences from a life led between Palestine, Switzerland and Germany. Volker Kaminski read the book

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