While we are on the subject of Arabic-speaking cats, here are five Arabic novels and short story collections in which cats play - as they should - a central role.
There are many more, but if you have any particular favourites, do add them 😊
1️⃣ Published in 1997 & illustrated by Maha Nasrallah, What Happened to Zeeko recounts the events of the Lebanese Civil War from the perspective of a cat.
Zeeko was a real cat who belonged to Emily’s daughter & who was killed in 1982 when the family’s home in Beirut was bombed.
2️⃣ Nobody Mourns the City’s Cats by Muhammad El-Hajj [@Mu7ajj] is a collection of 6 short stories about 6 couples whose relationships - with each other & with Cairo - unravel against the backdrop of failed revolutions & crushed dreams.
3️⃣ Humorous and unsettling, Mahmoud Shukair’s short story collection, ‘Mordechai's Moustache and His Wife's Cats’, is a glimpse of everyday life under occupation.
The collection also includes two essays by Shukair: ‘Hemingway in Jerusalem’ and ‘My Journey in Writing’.
4️⃣ The Apartment in Bab El-Louk is a collaborative portrait of downtown Cairo by Egyptian graphic designer Ganzeer, artist and writer Donia Maher, and political cartoonist Ahmed Nady.
If there is such a thing as a ‘noisy novel’, it would be this.
5️⃣ Hashem Gharaibeh’s The Cat Who Taught Me How to Fly is the story of a political prisoner and his relationship with a character nicknamed Cat. Partly autobiographical, Gharaibeh draws on his experience of being imprisoned for his affiliation with the Jordanian Communist Party.
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