by Soheir Khashoggi ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 1, 2005
Although the rat’s identity is a given, Khashoggi overcomes potentially melodramatic material with deft, fast-paced...
Famed songbird dies under suspicious circumstances, leaving her daughter to search the past for clues.
Egyptian author Khashoggi (Mirage, 1996, etc.), now New York City–based, spins the engrossing tale of Karima, who, born the daughter of a chauffeur (for an English cotton pasha in Alexandria), becomes a revered singer in the Middle East. From childhood, Karima and Charles, the pasha’s only child, have loved each other. But when Charles comes of age, his parents refuse to let him marry Karima. The two meet secretly at night, however, in risky defiance of Karima’s brother Omar, a spy and flimflam man with a gambling problem. When Charles, after a bar fight, dies in a car crash, Karima discovers she’s pregnant. Omar beats her, but, seeing a chance to profit, arranges a marriage for her with Munir, an older businessman. When her daughter, Nadia, is born, the makeshift family turns real, and Karima’s musical gift blossoms into a professional career. But a theater fire during Egypt’s political upheaval of 1952 spells tragedy. Toddler Nadia is lost in the melee and eventually picked up by a French-Egyptian couple, Celine and her doctor husband Tarik. Too desperate for a child to alert the authorities, they take her to France and name her Gabrielle. Eventually, Tarik traces Gaby’s parentage but, for Celine’s sake, keeps it a secret. Karima, still pining for her lost daughter, continues performing to great acclaim even after Munir’s death from a heart attack. A powerful general, Hamza, befriends her, while her brother continues to leech money from her. Gabrielle, now a promising journalist, returns to Paris, where Celine is dying of cancer. Tarik can finally release the secret, and Gaby and Karima have a bittersweet reunion. Just as the two women are growing closer, and Gaby’s career is taking off, Karima dies, allegedly of an alcohol/barbiturate overdose. Since her mother was a strict teetotaler, Gaby smells a rat.
Although the rat’s identity is a given, Khashoggi overcomes potentially melodramatic material with deft, fast-paced storytelling and sympathetic characters. A winner.Pub Date: July 1, 2005
ISBN: 0-765-31236-0
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Forge
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2005
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by Stephen King ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 29, 1980
An improvement over The Dead Zone, with King returning to his most tried-and-true blueprint. As in The Shining, the psi-carrier is a child, an eight-year-old girl named Charlie; but instead of foresight or hindsight, Charlie has firestarting powers. She looks and a thing pops into flame—a teddy bear, a nasty man's shoes, or (by novel's end) steel walls, whole houses, and stables and crowds of government villains. Charlie's parents Vicky and Andy were once college guinea pigs for drug experiments by The Shop, a part of the supersecret Department of Scientific Intelligence, and were given a hyperpowerful hallucinogen which affected their chromosomes and left each with strange powers of mental transference and telekinesis. When Vicky and Andy married, their genes produced Charlie and her wild talent for pyrokinesis: even as a baby in her crib, Charlie would start fires when upset and, later on, once set her mother's hands on fire. So Andy is trying to teach Charlie how to keep her volatile emotions in check. But when one day he comes home to find Vicky gruesomely dead in the ironing-board-closet, murdered by The Shop (all the experimental guinea pigs are being eliminated), Andy goes into hiding with Charlie in Manhattan and the Vermont backwoods—and Charlie uses her powers to set the bad men on fire and blow up their cars. They're soon captured, however, by Rainbird, a one-eyed giant Indian with a melted face—and father and daughter, separated, spend months being tested in The Shop. Then Andy engineers their escape, but when Andy is shot by Rainbird, Charlie turns loose her atomic eyes on the big compound. . . . Dumb, very, and still a far cry from the excitement of The Shining or Salem's Lot—but King keeps the story moving with his lively fire-gimmick and fewer pages of cotton padding than in his recent, sluggish efforts. The built-in readership will not be disappointed.
Pub Date: Sept. 29, 1980
ISBN: 0451167805
Page Count: 398
Publisher: Viking
Review Posted Online: Sept. 26, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1980
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by Ralph Ellison ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 7, 1952
An extremely powerful story of a young Southern Negro, from his late high school days through three years of college to his life in Harlem.
His early training prepared him for a life of humility before white men, but through injustices- large and small, he came to realize that he was an "invisible man". People saw in him only a reflection of their preconceived ideas of what he was, denied his individuality, and ultimately did not see him at all. This theme, which has implications far beyond the obvious racial parallel, is skillfully handled. The incidents of the story are wholly absorbing. The boy's dismissal from college because of an innocent mistake, his shocked reaction to the anonymity of the North and to Harlem, his nightmare experiences on a one-day job in a paint factory and in the hospital, his lightning success as the Harlem leader of a communistic organization known as the Brotherhood, his involvement in black versus white and black versus black clashes and his disillusion and understanding of his invisibility- all climax naturally in scenes of violence and riot, followed by a retreat which is both literal and figurative. Parts of this experience may have been told before, but never with such freshness, intensity and power.
This is Ellison's first novel, but he has complete control of his story and his style. Watch it.
Pub Date: April 7, 1952
ISBN: 0679732764
Page Count: 616
Publisher: Random House
Review Posted Online: Sept. 22, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 1952
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