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Mansour's Eyes

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2020

"Capitalism and religious fundamentalism collide in Girod's shimmering account of one man's heresy and imminent execution."—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

Mansour al-Jazaïri is on his way to his public execution. As his faithful friend Hussein looks on, the crowd calls for his head. Gassouh! Gassouh! It is a time when age-old rituals play out amid skyscrapers and are replayed on smartphone screens in the air-conditioned corridors of shopping malls. Set over the course of a single day in the Saudi Arabian capital, Mansour's Eyes weaves together several historical pasts: the time of Mansour's great-grandfather, the Emir Abdelkader; that of Algerian independence; and that of another Mansour, Mansur Al-Hallaj, a Sufi mystic executed in 922. In this lyrical and ambitious novel, Ryad Girod looks at the post-Arab Spring world as its drive toward modernity threatens to sever its relationship with the ethos of Sufi thought and mysticism.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 4, 2020
      Capitalism and religious fundamentalism collide in Girod’s shimmering account of one man’s heresy and imminent execution. In 2013, Syrian immigrants Mansour al-Jaziri, an architect, and his friend Hussein, an engineer, enjoy comfortable lives as members of the professional class in Saudi Arabia, with access to fast cars, booze, hashish, and friends in high places. As narrated by Hussein, their lives are abruptly changed when Mansour is struck with a headache, has a spiritual epiphany in the desert, and emerges mentally diminished. At a diplomatic affair in Riyadh, Mansour’s strange behavior intrigues the Australian socialite Nadine Nasr-Vaughan and her husband, an ex tennis star. Upon learning Mansour is jobless, the couple hires him as a live-in landscape architect. His subsequent affair with Nadine torments a jealous Hussein, and another employee reports his moral crime. Throughout, Girod neatly enmeshes the saga of Mansour’s great-great-grandfather, the religious and military leader Abdelkader, who struggled for Algerian independence and later attempted to make peace with the colonial French. Mansour’s epiphany mirrors his ancestor’s belief in enlightenment ideals of harmony and reconciliation—of East with West, art with science, man with God. Yet as Hussein observes, “even the purest of geometries breaks down, sometimes, into crude scribbles.” Girod’s incisive, sometimes terrifying tale illuminates colonial history and the fraught nature of Mansour’s ideals, gleaming as brightly in the believer’s eyes as on the blade above his head.

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