From Publishers Weekly
The penetrating realism that marked Nobel Prize winner Mahfouz's Cairo Trilogy glimmers only faintly in this entertaining and colorful populist epic fable, first published in Arabic in 1977. Ashur, founding chief of the al-Nagi clan, is a pious cart driver who protects the rights of the harafish (common people) and taxes the rich to give to the poor. After his reign, a succession of clan chiefs wallow in decadent luxury, living like thugs and collecting protection money. Characters and plot lines come and go with the speed of a soap opera in a zestful saga studded with murder, scandal, betrayal, tragedy and romance. Craving physical immortality, one clan chief, Galal, builds a strange minaret after consulting a mystical priest but is poisoned by his mistress Zaynat, an ex-prostitute. Finally, a new Ashur, namesake and distant relative of the clan's founder, restores justice and integrity, placing ordinary folk and nobility on equal footing. Mahfouz brings wry humor, political resonance and elegant turns of phrase to a tale that verges on melodrama.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The al-Nagi family's history through ten generations in their Cairo alley is "nothing more than a succession of deviations, disasters, lessons not learned." Ashur, the clan chief and ruler of the community, returns after the plague years to find the neighborhood deserted. Appropriating all the wealth and property, he distributes it to the impoverished (the harafish), creating the Covenant of Ashur. His legend is badly served, however, when succeeding generations succumb to the family curse: "A desire for status, money and possessions, at the heart of which was anxiety and fear." Brother kills brother, and son kills father. The devil is evoked to grant immortality, and debauchery is a common refuge. Mahfouz is at his best in this sweeping meditation on the price, demands, and rewards of greatness. This novel dashes across generations as if across a battlefield littered with the descendants of Ashur al-Nagi. Most highly recommended.
Paul E. Hutchison, Bellefonte, Pa.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.