On June 13, 1974, Shagara, a low-level employee at the Alexandria
shipyard, is charged with taking workers to cheer for the motorcade of
Egyptian President Sadat and his guest President Nixon. Instructed to
pay each worker half a pound at the end of Nixon's visit, Shagara pays
them half that, spares them the festivities, and pockets the difference.
So begins The House of Jasmine, which follows Shagara, a loner who
yearns for female companionship, as he traverses the city of Alexandria
and tries to parse his feelings toward its changing landscape. Within
the humor of this classic novel is nestled an indicting eyewitness
account of this essential period of Egyptian history. In it one can
observe the social changes and popular sentiments that comprise the
prologue for the Egyptian revolution of January 2011.