“Hot Maroc” Satirizes Marrakesh, Moroccan Society
El Habib Louai on the Moroccan novel that sizes up and lampoons a country coming into its own in the internet age.
El Habib Louai on the Moroccan novel that sizes up and lampoons a country coming into its own in the internet age.
Maryam Zar reviews the new biography from Kai Bird, examining the one-term president who went on to change the world.
Jessica Proett reviews Salar Abdoh’s empirical novel set during the days when ISIS was running loose across Iraq and Syria.
Travel the world, meet people, see great places, without ever leaving the comfort of your screen…well, in some cases you can go in person!
TMR reviews a new book on Palestinian and Israeli musicians looks at the border zones and interstices of the conflict.
Musician and Middle East historian Mark LeVine interviews ethnomusicologist Nili Belkind on her new book profiling Palestinian and Israeli musicians.
Our editorial outlines the fact that wasta isn’t exclusively an Arab problem, but one that plagues societies east and west.
Bethlehem chef Fadi Kattan recalls the disaster of wasta leading up to Christmas Eve at Fawda restaurant.
Novelist Samir El-Youssef recalls adolescent challenges and more recent experience where wasta was a necessity.
After surviving an Egyptian prison and obtaining asylum in the United States, Ahmed Naji contemplates wasta and standing in line.
In which C.S. Layla, the American daughter of a Jordanian professor, remembers life and wasta in the old country.
Victoria Schneider reports from Beirut on the new Wasta board game that satirizes corruption in Lebanon.