Yusuf Idris was undoubtedly one of Egypt's most talented and versatile
writers in the second half of the twentieth century. The first two
novellas in this volume, Madam Vienna and The Secret of His Power, come
from the peak period in his career, the late 1950s and early 1960s,
while New York 80 belongs to his late period, the 1980s. Yet something
holds these three works together, despite their different periods and
their scattered settings: Vienna, an Egyptian Delta village, and New
York. They all deal with a seminal theme in Arabic fiction since its
nascent years and until today: the East-West encounter, often treated
allegorically by Arab writers through a love story between an Arab man
and a Western woman who stand for their respective cultures. In these
three novellas, Idris harnesses his remarkable narrative skills to tell
us some of the most memorable stories of the encounter in Arabic
fiction.