At a Cairo café, a cross-section of Egyptian society, young and old,
rich and poor, are drawn together by the quality of its coffee and the
allure of its owner, legendary former dancer Qurunfula. When three of
the young patrons disappear for prolonged periods, the older customers
display varying reactions to the news. On their return, they recount
horrific stories of arrest and torture at the hands of the secret
police, and the habitués of the café begin to withdraw from each other
in fear, suspecting that there is an informer among them. With the
nighttime arrests and the devastation of the country's defeat in the
1967 War, the café is transformed from a haven of camaraderie and
bright-eyed idealism to an atmosphere charged with mounting suspicion,
betrayal, and crushing disillusionment. Exposing the dark underbelly of
ideology, and delving into the idea of the 'necessary evils' of social
upheaval, Karnak Café remains one of the Nobel laureate's most pointedly
critical works, as relevant and incisive today as it was when it was
first published in 1974.