Rayyan Al-Shawaf
To Air Is Human
By Rayyan Al-ShawafJonas Woldemariam, the diffident and aloof Ethiopian-American narrator of Dinaw Mengestus How to Read the Air, was born and raised in Peoria, Illinois, but is afflicted with the angst and uncertainty of a deracinated and perpetual migrant.
A Sexual Revival?
By Rayyan Al-ShawafMeg Wolitzer has an uncanny ability to turn the mundane but consuming difficulties of marriage and motherhood into biting and humorous novelistic fare.
FICTION
The Young and the Radical
By Rayyan Al-Shawaf
The Muslim American novel has arrived, and it is titled American Dervish. There have been other novels by and about Muslim Americans, but Ayad Akhtars tale distinguishes itself from its predecessorsand, one can safely predict, from its successorsby probing controversial aspects of Islam alongside its sympathetic portrayal of one Muslim American boys maturation.
A Compelling, If Foggy Debut
By Rayyan Al-ShawafSome might grumble that the novel Out of It, with its secular, nominally Muslim, and Westernized Palestinian protagonists who oppose Islamists both for their ideology and their attacks on Israeli civilian targets, was deliberately crafted with the intent of making a much-maligned Arab people more palatable to a Western readership.
Frederick & Fyodor
By Rayyan Al-ShawafYou would be forgiven the assumption that The Black Russian, a new book by Vladimir Alexandrov, is about the vodka and coffee liqueur cocktail.