3.5 Stars. I was gifted the paperback version of the book, but soon switched to Kindle so I could enlarge the print. The author is Éric Chacour, a Quebecois writer. It is his debut novel, and it caused a literary sensation when it was first published in French. It won many top literary awards, and now an English version has been translated with much critical acclaim. The story shifts back and forth between Cairo and Montreal, spanning the years from the early 1980s to the 2000s. It is written in easy-to-follow, compelling, emotional language within a unique structure.
The story begins in what seems like a straightforward manner, but is soon revealed to have an unconventional style. There is a second-person narrative. Who is this narrator? What are his intentions in detailing the protagonist's story? This switch initially confused me, but it provided a deeper perspective. We do not learn the identity of the second-person narrator until much later, and we get some of his own personal account.
Young Tarek grows up in a Levantine Christian community in Cairo. They have a feeling of social superiority, bringing with them their past culture and French education. The background is one of war, political and social upheaval. Tarek expects to become a doctor, like his much-respected father, and to get married; he follows that path. Tarek is a boy in search of truth and identity. When his father dies, Tarek, now an adult with medical training, moves into his father's practice at an upper-class hospital catering mainly to Levantine patients. He also wants to open a clinic in the poorest neighbourhood. Tarek's family now consists of strong, supportive women.
Both his medical practices are thriving. He takes on a young man from the slum area. Ali has no formal education, but is bright and quickly learns what Tarek teaches. Tarek is unaware that Ali, when not assisting in the medical field, is also a male prostitute. As time passes, Tarek and Ali develop a loving, forbidden relationship. Homosexuality in Cairo can be an indictable offence, it is considered against the local religions, and a sign of Western perversion. The book expresses their love in a sensitive and emotional manner.
Tarek has recently married, but neglects his wife due to his new, romantic passion for Ali. His wife reacts by constantly taking trips away from home. He is bringing disgrace to his own family; his mother, grandmother, sister and his new wife. There is a housekeeper who sees and knows everything. Will she play a part? As Tarek and Ali's relationship becomes a public scandal, patients begin to avoid the clinics, and the main building is vandalized. Tarek realizes that his well-planned future no longer exists.
He flees to Montreal, leaving his wife, family, and Ali behind. He gains credits to become a doctor in Canada.. The atmosphere is much different. It is cold and snowing in Montreal, far different from bustling Cairo and its sunny beaches. Tarek begins receiving letters from a journalist wanting to interview him for an article about Egyptian doctors practicing abroad. Tarek is suspicious and refuses to answer. Why is the letter writer so insistent that they meet?
This was a tense, suspenseful, tangled tale with a satisfying ending.