A Day in the Life: Cairo
The writer’s visit to a Cairo internet store to renew her internet service proves to be an out of body experience.
The writer’s visit to a Cairo internet store to renew her internet service proves to be an out of body experience.
In Edward Lovelace’s new documentary, a refugee’s handicap becomes a source of inspiration in the struggle for survival.
In and out of Turkish prisons for his unflinching political essays, Ahmet Altan returns with a new novella in English.
Youssef Rakha is more interested in what it means to be a contemporary Arab-Muslim independently of the West than an American Arab.
Katie Logan has read “The Undesirables” — a graphic novel set in WW II-era Europe and North Africa.
Sarah Naili interviews musical artists who meld eastern and western instruments, and forms, to create their unique sounds of beauty.
Lou Heliot presents a portrait of three engagé novelists who make literature the locus of their resistance.
Anis Shivani finds that Siddhartha Deb’s “outright denial of human agency sets him apart from even the most dire modernists.”
Iason Athanasiadis reviews the Iraqi correspondent’s new memoir on Middle East wars and asks questions.
Yousef M. Aljamal surmises renewed attacks on Jenin signal Israel’s intention to end Palestinian hopes for statehood.
Jordanian Rabee’ Zureikat is on a mission to restore severed links to the Arab past by reviving a musical heritage, one nay at a time.
Books continue to be a mainstay in Beirut, although bookshops are resorting to survival strategies.