An Arab tyrant once infamously declared, "I see heads that are ripe for
plucking." In Mahmoud Al-Wardani's novel of tyranny and oppression, an
impaled head seeks solace in narrating similar woes it sustained in
previous incarnations. Beheadings, both literal and
metaphorical--torture, murder, decapitation, brainwashing, losing one's
head--are the subject of the six stories that unfold. The narrative
takes us from the most archetypal beheading in Arabo-Islamic history,
that of al-Husayn, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, via a crime
passionel, the torture of Communists in Nasser's prisons, the
meanderings of a Cairene teenager unwittingly caught in the bread riots
of 1977, a body dismembered in the 1991 Gulf War, and a bloodless
beheading on the eve of the new millennium, into a dystopic future where
heads are periodically severed to undergo maintenance and downloading of
programs.