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Book reviews

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  • In "The Last White Man", award-winning Pakistani-British author Mohsin Hamid asks what would happen if a white man woke up one morning to find he was dark-skinned. A masterfully written Kafkaesque parable about everyday racism and discrimination.
    Mohsin Hamid's "The Last White Man"

    The (familiar) stranger in the mirror

    In his latest novel, award-winning Pakistani-British author Mohsin Hamid asks what would happen if a white man woke up one morning to find he was dark-skinned. A masterfully written Kafkaesque parable about everyday racism and discrimination. Volker Kaminski read the book

  • What does literature have to do with the Iran protests? It is a seismograph of societal developments. Reading books written by Iranian women authors over recent decades, you can plainly see the upheavals and eruptions growing larger and more forceful; you can see how much has been bottled up over time. It was very clear that at some point, all this would spark a revolution.
    Women's voices

    Iranian literature in times of uprising

    Young women are driving forward the protests against the Iranian regime, which have been going on for months. Literature provides clues as to why that should be, and why the current situation was unavoidable. By Gerrit Wustmann

  • Paradise is a dark novel, strange and filled with black humour, and Christine Battermann’s German translation deftly brings this to the fore. It is to Schiler & Mücke’s credit that they were able to discover Sabah Sanhouri and introduce her work to the German book market.
    Sabah Sanhouri's "Paradise"

    The last resort

    Sabah Sanhouri is a fresh, new literary voice from Sudan. Her novel "Paradise" revolves around an agency of the same name, an organisation that assists desperate people in ending their lives. By Volker Kaminski

  • Author Mohamed Amjahid has studied the nature of love and desire from Cairo to Casablanca.
    Let's talk about sex, habibi!

    Love and desire from Cairo to Casablanca

    Berlin journalist Mohamed Amjahid writes humorously and very intimately about how people experience love and desire across North Africa. Melanie Christina Mohr read the book

  • The origins of the Maghreb

    Was the Arab Maghreb a French invention?

    The book "The Invention of the Maghreb: between Africa and the Middle East" prompts us to review basic terminology. This includes terms that we use almost every day as if they are definitive by virtue of geography, history and culture, such as "the Arab Maghreb", "North Africa", "the Middle East" and "sub-Saharan Africa". Shady Lewis Botros read the book

  • Iranian literature in exile

    "A great demand for Persian books"

    Cologne-based publisher Anahita Redisiu sells Persian books that have been banned or censored in Iran. She regards the situation in Iran with concern and has harsh words for Germany's stance towards the Iranian regime. Gerrit Wustmann spoke to her about politics and literature

  • Our German fairytale

    Reality, crueller than fiction

    Award-winning poet Dincer Gucyeter’s debut novel is a tour de force through the German reality he experienced as an artist and son of Turkish immigrants, written with an unsparing eye and literary ambition. Gerrit Wustmann read the book

  • What makes Rumi's verses so captivating, far beyond Sufi circles? Do we even understand him correctly, or are we in the West only scratching the surface?
    New release to mark 750th anniversary of Rumi's death

    Complete edition of the "Masnavi" in German

    For the first time ever, a complete edition of Rumi's "Masnavi" has been published in German in verse. At the Sufi Festival in Hamburg in late November, Marian Brehmer met translator Otto Hoeschle and spoke to him about the significance of this masterpiece of Islamic mysticism

  • The founder of the Muslim Brotherhood Hasan al-Banna (1906 - 1949) is one of the most important Islamist thinkers and activists.
    Hasan al-Banna and the Muslim Brotherhood

    Who was the architect of Islamism?

    Renowned scholar of Islamic Studies Gudrun Kramer has just published the first well-founded biography of Hasan al-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Joseph Croitoru read the book

  • Fariduddin Attar’s “The Conference of the Birds“, one of the seminal works of Islamic mysticism, has recently been published in sumptuously illustrated German translation. It makes an excellent introduction to the Persian poet.
    Attar’s "The Conference of the Birds"

    There is no person whose soul has not suffered

    Fariduddin Attar’s "The Conference of the Birds", one of the seminal works of Islamic mysticism, has recently been published in sumptuously illustrated German translation. It makes an excellent introduction to the Persian poet. By Gerrit Wustmann

  • The degree to which Benghazi was politicised in U.S. politics remains unmatched in modern times. The Republicans seized every opportunity to demonise the then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the Democrats, refusing to consider a bipartisan resolution to the issues at stake. Chorin traces the repercussions of this to the present day, considering what factors could combine to potentially create another Benghazi, and how to avoid such an outcome.
    America’s partisan war

    Benghazi 9/11 casts a long shadow

    Cries of "Benghazi!" still resonate across the USA ten years after a deadly terrorist attack in Libya killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. Ethan Chorin re-tells Benghazi as a watershed moment, one that has helped create today's America: polarised, fearful and dangerously unstable. Sherif Dhaimish read the book

  • Hamas’ many human rights violations and the movement’s authoritarian leadership style cannot justify the Israeli army’s treatment of civilians. Over the course of the Great March of Return rallies between 2018 and 2019, Israeli snipers injured almost 8,000 people with live ammunition according to UN figures: in all more than 35,000 people were injured and more than 200 killed.
    Human Rights Film Festival Berlin

    "Erasmus in Gaza"

    An Italian medical student on a study trip in the Palestinian territories: this documentary takes advantage of the unusual setting to shed light on the unbearable situation of Gaza’s civilian population. By Rene Wildangel

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