Annual subscription to Banipal online for only £18.00.
Full refund within 30 days if you're not completely satisfied.
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog
Go to page 212 Go to page 162 Go to page 222 Go to page 224 Go to page 219 Go to page 150 Go to page 130 Go to page 144 Go to page 199 Go to page 203 Go to page 127 Go to page 180 Go to page 196 Go to page 175 Go to page 217 Go to page 206 Go to page 178 Go to page 214 Go to page 137 Go to page 118 Go to page 209
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog

118 Razan Naim Moghrabi – An excerpt from the novel

Women of the Wind, translated by William M Hutchins 127 Redwan Abushwesha – Five short stories,

translated by John Peate 130 Giuma Bukleb – Two short stories, translated by

Sophia Vasalou 137 Mohammed al-Asfar – The Hoopoe, a short story,

translated by Ali Azeriah 144 Najwa Binshatwan – His Excellency the Eminence of the Void, a short story translated by Suneela Mubayi 150 Saleh Snoussi – An excerpt from the novel Halq el-

Rih, translated by William M. Hutchins 162 Ibrahim al-Koni – Excerpts from the novel New

Waw, translated by William M. Hutchins 175 Elliott Colla – Translating Ibrahim Al-Koni 178 Peter Clark reviews The Puppet by Ibrahim al-Koni INTERVIEW 180 Alawiya Sobh – Interviewed by Akl Awit TRIBUTE 196 Tribute: Edmond Amran El Maleh 1917–2010

by Abdelkarim Jouiti BOOK REVIEWS 199 André Naffis-Sahely: The Calligrapher’s Secret by

Rafik Schami 203 James Dalglish: Yalo by Elias Khoury 206 André Naffis-Sahely: White Masks by Elias Khoury 209 Susannah Tarbush: Like a Summer Never to Be

Repeated by Mohamed Berrada 212 Norbert Hirshhorn: The Loved Ones by Alia

Mamdouh 214 Susannah Tarbush: Saint Theresa and Sleeping with

Strangers by Bahaa Abdelmegid 217 Tristan Cranfield: Emerging Arab Voices Nadwa 1: A

Bilingual Reader, edited by Peter Clark

219 BOOKS IN BRIEF

Fiction, Poetry and Non-Fiction 222 CONTRIBUTORS 224 Subscription information and form

Banipal, founded in 1998, takes its name from Ashurbanipal, last great king of Assyria and patron of the ar ts, whose outstanding achievement was to assemble in Nineveh, from all over his empire, the fir st systematically organised l ibrar y in the ancient Middle East. The thousands of clay tablets of Sumerian, Babylonian and Assyrian writings included the famous Mesopotamian epics of the Creation, the Flood, and Gilgamesh, many folk tales, fables, proverbs, prayers and omen texts.

Source: Encyclopaedia Britannica

BANIPAL 40 – LIBYAN FICTION 7