Thought by many Syrians to be the most influential novel of its time,
this first novel of Muhammad Kamil al-Khatib is a riveting examination
of Syrian political and social life during the 1980s. With a
multi-voiced narration carried, like a river, from one voice to another,
al-Khatib paints concise, vivid portraits of a disparate group of people
in Damascus, ranging from an older officer in the Syrian army, to a
university student coming to terms with her sexuality in a traditional
context, to a British Orientalist on sabbatical, to a disillusioned
activist who must reconcile his ideals with the realities of war and
city life. Though the particularities of the explored lives may be
quintessentially Syrian, the struggle between the generations, between
men and women, between country and city, and between victor and
vanquished are international in scope.