Description |
252 pages ; 21 cm |
Summary |
From 1982 to 1994, Syrian topographer Khalifa was incarcerated in his country's infamous Tadmur Military Prison, and his decision to present his experiences as fiction results in a document both haunting and bold. Perhaps only fiction could do justice to the suffering he endured, but as the narrator also notes, explaining that he resorted to an Islamist technique called mental writing to store up what he experienced, "I cannot write and say everything." The selected scenes of beatings, torture, hunger, and executions are scalding enough. Having fatefully decided to return home from France, Khalifa's young narrator is immediately imprisoned and accused of being a Muslim terrorist. In fact, he is Christian-raised and proclaims himself an atheist, which serves to isolate him from his scornful fellow inmates and makes his imprisonment even worse. The story arcs persuasively from the narrator's first shocks through his steady endurance in the shell that was his prison to his survival upon release in a second shell that's "becoming thicker and blacker." -- Provided by publisher. |
Subject |
Political prisoners -- Syria -- Fiction.
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Christians -- Syria -- Fiction.
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Torture -- Syria -- Fiction.
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Christians. (OCoLC)fst00859760
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Political prisoners. (OCoLC)fst01069636
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Torture. (OCoLC)fst01152956
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Syria. (OCoLC)fst01208757
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Genre/Form |
Political fiction.
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Psychological fiction.
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Fiction. (OCoLC)fst01423787
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Added Author |
Starkey, Paul, translater.
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ISBN |
1566560225 |
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9781566560221 |
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