In this beautiful art book, award-winning American photographer Ann
Parker records and celebrates life as it passes along a road through a
typical village in the Egyptian Nile Delta in the early twenty-first
century. But her photographs are not mere documents of a specific time
and place; they transcend both as she captures timeless moments in an
eternal world and presents us with a potentially infinite and hauntingly
memorable pageant of living tableaux, silhouetted against the late
afternoon sky. Like spectators seated in a theater, we watch the comings
and goings of the village's people, animals, and vehicles on the road in
front of us. Introducing the photographs are extracts from the
autobiographical reflections of the poet Muhammad Afifi Matar, who was
born and grew up in a small Delta village very like the one pictured by
Ann Parker. His recollections of a rural Egyptian childhood and
adolescence are sometimes warming, sometimes chilling, but always
insightful and thought-provoking.