Secret identities, criminal conspiracies, and forbidden love converge
in this "whimsical and at times heartbreaking look" at the Muslim
communities of Rome (The New York Times).
The Italian secret service believes that a group of Muslim immigrants is
planning a terrorist attack. Christian Mazzari, a young Sicilian
translator who speaks perfect Arabic, goes undercover in Rome's Egyptian
neighborhood, Viale Marconi, to infiltrate the group. Posing as a
recently arrived Tunisian in search of a job and a place to sleep,
Christian soon meets Sofia, a young Egyptian immigrant whose arranged
marriage is anything but fulfilling. While Christian attempts in vain to
uncover terrorist activity, Sofia is on another kind of secret
mission--in defiance of a husband who forbids her to work.
In alternating voices, Algerian-born Italian author Amara Lakhous
examines the commonplaces and stereotypes of life in modern,
multicultural Italy. Divorce Islamic Style mixes the rational and the
absurd as it depicts the conflicts and contradictions of today's
globalized world.