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Author:
Murphy, Molly.
Title:
An Introduction to The thief and the dogs by Naguib Mahfouz [sound recording] / written and produced by Molly Murphy and Dan Stone at the National Endowment for the Arts.
Format:
[sound recording] /
Publisher:
National Endowment for the Arts,
Copyright Date:
2008
Description:
1 sound disc (28 min., 59 sec.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Subject:
Maḥfūẓ, Najīb,--1911-2006--Criticism and interpretation.
Other Authors:
Gioia, Dana.
Ghīṭānī, Jamāl.
Gordimer, Nadine.
Le Gassick, Trevor.
McKelvey, Tara.
McKinty, Adrian.
Salmāwī, Muḥammad.
Stock, Raymond T.
Gero, Edward.
Stone, Dan.
National Endowment for the Arts.
Notes:
Readings of excerpts and critical analysis. Narrated by Dana Gioia ; Gamal Al-Ghitani, Nadine Gordimer, Trevor Le Gassick, Tara McKelvey, Adrian McKinty, Mohamed Salmawy, Raymond Stock, Edward Gero, contributors.
Contents:
Naguib Mahfouz is not only Egypt's most respected writer. He is also the most influential novelist in the history of Arabic literature. More than any other author, Mahfouz found innovative ways to make the novel, a primarily Western form, relevant to Arabic experience. His many novels and short stories cover almost every literary genre, but none is more exciting or original than The Thief and the Dogs. Spanning the wealthy suburbs and crowded slums of Cairo, this thrilling crime story combines stream-of-consciousness technique with the hard-boiled style of detective fiction to create a harrowing account of crime and punishment.
Summary:
Naguib Mahfouz's The Thief and the Dogs (1961) is a multi-faceted story that is equal parts crime thriller, morality tale, and political allegory. The novel begins with career criminal Said Mahran's release from prison. He immediately sets off for the home of his ex-wife's new husband, desperate to settle a score with the man he feels betrayed him and hoping to reunite with his young daughter, Sana. Instead, she rejects him. Said next visits the posh home of his friend and mentor Rauf Ilwan, a former leader of the student resistance who has thoroughly abandoned the egalitarian principles he supported during the Revolution of 1952. Sensing Said is not willing to give up his life of crime, Rauf rebuffs him, saying, "Things are no longer what they used to be". Consumed by bitterness and motivated by a desire for revenge on the society and individuals he feels have failed him, Said's quest for vengeance carries readers from the banks of the Nile River, through the boulevards and back alleys of Cairo, to Bab al-Nasr --- a medieval gateway on the outskirts of the city. Chances for redemption and a new way of life come to him in the form of Nur, a prostitute who believes her love can transform them both, and Sheikh Ali al-Junaydi, a Sufi cleric who offers Said the opportunity to reject worldly temptation in favor of a spiritual path. Unable to accept either eros or agape, Said soon finds himself the most hunted man in Egypt --- aimless, desperate, and alone. Long known as a writer of realist fiction, 'The Thief and the Dogs' marks Mahfouz's first use of the stream-of-consciousness technique. The result is a ground-breaking work that allows the reader intimate access to the thoughts, emotions, and motivations of a man consumed by rage and hell-bent on self-destruction.
Series:
Big read
OCLC:
(OCoLC)243701079
LCCN:
2008655672
Locations:
ETPD745 -- Emmetsburg Public Library (Emmetsburg)
NBPB943 -- Lehigh Public Library (Lehigh)
FGPD194 -- New Hampton Public Library (New Hampton)
HPPD845 -- Orange City Public Library (Orange City)
HIPC765 -- Pocahontas Public Library (Pocahontas)

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