The Map of Love: A Novel
by Ahdaf Soueif
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This book was a bit slow for me, the story is definitely brilliant but not tremendously dramatic. I can definitely see why the author is compared to Tolstoy, Flaubert and Eliot.
From the Publisher
With her first novel, In the Eye of the Sun, Ahdaf Soueif garnered comparisons to Tolstoy, Flaubert, and George Eliot. In her latest novel, which was shortlisted for Britain's prestigious Booker Prize, she combines the romantic skill of the nineteenth-century novelists with a very modern sense...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
people who like historical fiction + kindacheezy romance novels + supernatural element
Eh, I've finally finished this book and it was okay. Kinda slow, but I liked the format - mostly journal entries and old letters pieced together. The glossary of terms at the back of the book was nice. I learned a lot about the history of British colonialism in Egypt, Palestine, etc. - the nationalist resistance movements, harem etiquette. I was hoping this was going to be a fantastical story of love and radical politics that crossed generations (history repeating, interwoven, on fire) and t...more
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Read in June, 2007
History and political analysis just the way I like it - coated with compelling fiction. The romanticism and lushness of the prose threw me at first, but suited the story well and won me over.
This book uses connected love stories to examine Egyptian nationalism in the face of British colonialism in the early 1900s. This opens out into suches themes as broader colonialism, the Arabic language, and early Zionism.
While not perfect (sometimes hard to sustain the breathlessness and the endin...more
This book uses connected love stories to examine Egyptian nationalism in the face of British colonialism in the early 1900s. This opens out into suches themes as broader colonialism, the Arabic language, and early Zionism.
While not perfect (sometimes hard to sustain the breathlessness and the endin...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
Proper moms that harbor fantasies about Arab men. Those who go apeshit over Ian McEwan.
It's midnight at the Oasis. The air is dry and warm, scented of Jasmine and a beautiful, spunky blonde Englishwoman in drag bewitches the sensitive, progressive Egyptian man in the shadow of the great ruins in one of several highly cinematic encounters written several decades too late for Omar Sharif and Julie Christie to play the protagonists.
I didn't hate this book (though it takes several strange, unadvised turns--at least once into a bizarre and unresolved issue of incest), but the fram...more
I didn't hate this book (though it takes several strange, unadvised turns--at least once into a bizarre and unresolved issue of incest), but the fram...more
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
Romantics
I really enjoyed this book. The first twenty pages went a bit slow, but after that the love story between the Englishwoman and the Egyptian man really grabbed the romantic in me. I also enjoyed the mini Egyptian history lesson within the story and am eager to learn more about that particular era in the Middle East. I agree that the modern love story was not as well conceived, and I often wanted to rush over those sections to get back to the other story. But is the present ever as romantic as th...more
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recommends it for:
anyone who wants to learn some Arabic phrases
I bought this book in a bookshop in Covent Garden in London for an exorbitant fourteen pounds and I suspect that I was overcharged. It's beautiful (the cover itself, most of the writing, the story) and well conceived, but there was something lacking in the end. I appreciated the generational aspect of the story and the almost supernatural abilities of the characters, as well as the way the narrative was divided amongst letters, journals, and a general third person voice. I'm not sure what I f...more
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story of lady Anna and syeikh Syarif,, very romantic how they meet, how they understand, and respect each other.they came from two world even syeikh Syarif ever lived in europe but he not changes his attitude and still have his culture as Arabian man. open minded and can respect others culture and the way another people thinking is really important in relationship like them. blend 2cultures is not easy.and love is the key.hmh,, wish for love story like this can be true, but too good to be true,,...more
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Read in December, 2007
I really enjoyed the cultural aspects of this book....a journey into the lives of Egyptians, past and present. I found the intergenerational story very intriguing, but incomplete. I would have enjoyed knowing the middle generation in more depth. I found the secondary characters somewhat confusing as was some of the political information, probably due to my lack of knowledge aboutthe Egyptian political situation, past and present. Some of the characters came to life...Anna in particular, while ot...more
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Read in April, 2003
This lyrical book paints a vivid and moving picture of colonial and modern-day Egypt, and allows the reader to catch a glimpse of the inherently different ways its history is viewed by East and West. Beautiful descriptions and tender scenes invite the reader to share the pain and the joy of cross-cultural relationships. The modern-day love story echoes the one from the past, showing how little some things have changed in the last hundred years in Egypt. I highly recommend this beautifully writte...more
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One of my favorite books - it has everything you could want - romance, Egypt, kidnapping, desserts, stars, England, illigitamate children, brooding academic-types, sexy political dissidents, bold women, multi-cultural challenges, contemporary politics, turn-of-the-20th-century politics, luxe, fabric, fashion, trunks with old letters, family homes, lattice - shiveringly good...
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Read in July, 2008
Full disclosure - I only read the first half. What rating do I give a book that is very well-written but just didn't hold my interest? It's the story of modern-day cousins, one American and one Egyptian, forming a friendship while discovering, through letters and journals, the friendship of their great-grandmothers, one British and one Egyptian. Basically I liked all the parts set in the past but became tired of the modern story.
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Read in July, 2008
A story within a story (a technique I usually love) set in Egypt. A dual love story that had great potential, but lost it for me in the political discussion of England's control of Egypt in the early 1900's. Too much of the politics that went way over my head and not enough character development. Interesting treatment of women both then and now, and I liked that there was a nice glossary of Egyptian terms in the back.
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Well - I'm not sure I can classify this one as "read" since I finally gave up on it! The reviews that say it's a bit slow - more than a bit for me! I've been trying to read it for months and keep picking it up and putting it down. When I wasn't successful after my very last try (when I was stuck with my in-laws and wanted to do nothing BUT read a good book) I decided to give up on finishing.
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Read in January, 2001
The parallel stories of a British aristocratic widow who falls in love with an Egyptian nationalist in the late 19th century, and a young American woman of Egyptian heritage who goes in search of her roots in the late 20th century. Lyrical writing and the kind of plot that will keep you up way past your bedtime and will have you sobbing your eyes out when it comes to a close.
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I loved this book. The story flits between two times (early 20th century Egypt, and late 20th century New York) following two generations of the same family - a grandmother and granddaughter. It's a great read, following the grand-daughter piecing together the history of her grandparents from an old trunk containing letters, a diary and some other momentoes. Lovely writing.
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Romantics, Culturists
Interesting story of love across cultures and time set against the backdrop of Cairo. Has all of the idealism of "true" love plus the anguish (both will make you cry) that goes along with life no matter where or when it happens. The similarities and contrasts between life in the early 1900s and late 1990s across family ties was intriguing. Beautifully written novel!
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Read in December, 2006
recommends it for:
anyone who loves Egyptian history
I bought the entire collection of the 2006 Bloomsbury 21, and this is book 8. This is a fantastic read, shortlisted for the Booker Prize, and deservedly so. I really enjoyed the political satire, although I was a bit unnerved by the fact that two of the main characters were sleeping together knowing full well they might be father and daughter - bit creepy.
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I started reading this book on my return flight after having spent a week in Egypt. Soueif's political & social commentary is particularly sobering after witnessing the cities she describes grappling with the same troubles over a century later (government corruption, mixed feelings about foreign interference/aid, poverty, questions about women's status).
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
anybody interested in the Middle East circa 1900
It's gives a good account of what Egypt was like under British colonial rule around 1900 and also has some interetsing information in it regarding the Zionist movement in Palestine.
I really enjoyed reading it and found the plot to be very enjoyable. The title makes it seem as though it's just a romance novel, but it really is so much more..
I really enjoyed reading it and found the plot to be very enjoyable. The title makes it seem as though it's just a romance novel, but it really is so much more..
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This is one of my top ten all time favorites! The narrative of the story told through modern eyes and old letters written generations before was unique and interesting. The Egyptian colonialist setting is fascinating. And I love independent Anna, her courage, her spirit and her love light the pages of this fantastic novel.
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