Un grand merci à Flora Moricet pour le très bel article sur Comment réparer : la maternité et ces fantômes, d'Iman Mersal 🌷
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#imanmersal

Notre dernier titre vient de sortir, en librairie début juin où en pré-commande, diffusé par Serendip.

#imanmersal
#serendip

My favorite reads of 2023 (not all new, all literary fiction except where noted):

Biography of X - #CatherineLacey
Traces of Enayat - #ImanMersal (nonfic)
After Sappho - #SelbyWynnSchwartz
Noopiming - #LeanneBetasamosakeSimpson
This Accident of Being Lost - #LeanneBetasamosakeSimpson
The Wall - #MarlenHaushofer
Bad Cree - #JessicaJohns (horror)
Your Love Is Not Good - #JohannaHedva
Flux by #JinwooChong
The New Animals - #PipAdam
Tomb of Sand - #GeetanjaliShree

#bookstodon

Another top book of 2023: Traces of Enayat by #ImanMersal (originally published in Arabic in 2019). I picked this up only because the 2 books I recently read from this publisher (And Other Stories) were amazing. So glad I did. After randomly picking up a novel, Mersal spends years trying to find out who the author was, and why her life ended tragically. Mersal's writing is intoxicating, I kept forgetting that this was nonfiction, and it made me wish dearly that I was still an academic myself.

"Sometimes a piece of writing can shake your very being. This doesn't mean it has to be unprecedented in the history of literature or the best thing you've ever read. It is fate, delivering a message to help you make sense of whatever you're going through - and at the exact moment you most need it, whether you realise it or not...When we turn to contemplate our lives, it is these works that let us see."
#ImanMersal in Traces of Enayat (about #EnayatAlZayyat)

#writing #bookstodon

Where are all the wasted days?

C.V.
Iman Mersal, translated from the Arabic by Robyn Creswell

#Poetry #PoetryInTranslation #ArabicPoetry #ImanMersal #RobynCreswell #CV #NewYorkReviewOfBooks

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2021/05/13/c-v/

C.V. | Iman Mersal

A ruthless catalog of sorrows: years in front of the screen, diplomas before jobs, and languages—all that torture—now ranged under Languages. Where are

The New York Review of Books