Originally published in Cairo in 1998, this carefully crafted novel
represents a welcome addition to a body of literature that has so far
received less than the attention it merits by comparison with that of
Egypt and the Levant. Set among the oil wells of the Basra region of
southern Iraq, where the writer spent much of his working life, the
novel draws on the author's own experiences to paint a picture at once
subtle and vivid of relations between the British and their local
employees in the 1950s. Much of the action is seen through the eyes of
the young, bookish narrator, who is clearly modeled on the author
himself. It soon becomes clear that a world of difference separates the
lives of Abu Jabbar, Hussein, Istifan, and the rest from that of their
European bosses with their company dances and other strange social
customs. Although the novel has a strongly nationalistic flavor, it is
also suffused with a lingering sense of nostalgia for a gentler age,
which will inevitably prompt reflections on the more recent British and
US involvement in that unhappy country.