No One Prayed Over Their Graves

(Author) (Translator)
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Product Details
Price
$30.00  $27.90
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publish Date
Pages
416
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.2 X 1.5 inches | 1.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780374601928

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About the Author
Khaled Khalifa (1964-2023) was born near Aleppo, Syria, the fifth child of a family of thirteen siblings. He studied law at Aleppo University and actively participated in the foundation of Aleph magazine with a group of writers and poets. A few months later, the magazine was closed down by Syrian censorship. Active in the arts scene in Damascus where he lived, Khalifa was a writer of screenplays for television and cinema as well as novels that explore Syrian history. His 2019 novel Death Is Hard Work was a finalist for the National Book Award. Leri Price is the translator of Khaled Khalifa's Death Is Hard Work, In Praise of Hatred, and No Knives in the Kitchens of This City, as well as literature from Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Syria, and Saudi Arabia.
Reviews

Praise for No One Prayed Over Their Graves

"A gorgeous new novel from Khaled Khalifa, one of Syria's most celebrated novelists . . . Lush, elegiac . . . Márquezian . . . A novel of abundance and generosity . . . At stake is the act of storytelling itself: gossip, religious narrative, war photography, any narrative in which bigotry can reside . . . The pain of witness surfaces across the story." --Sarah Cypher, The Washington Post

"A beautiful novel . . . Khalifa's partnership with Leri Price is one of the most fruitful writer-translator pairings in literature today. The recent destruction of Aleppo provides unspoken context, charging the exploration of ruin and aftermath with further heartbreak." --Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal

"Love stories--thwarted, tragic or ecstatic--help bring a many-stranded plot together . . . Richly embroidered . . . [Khalifa's] galloping narration restores life and soul to a city that has become a byword for devastation. Leri Price, who also translated Death Is Hard Work from Arabic, has produced an English text of grace, pace and gusto. Aleppo's 'immortal' monuments may have been bombed to rubble, but, thanks to Mr Khalifa, those 'great stories' endure." --The Economist

"Through its intimacy and grace, No One Prayed Over Their Graves is a heart-wrenching and beautiful exploration of change in Syria." --Michael Welch, Chicago Review of Books (a July must-read)

"Elegantly written . . . the extraordinary closing pages, poetic and prophetic, speak to the possibility of building a "kingdom where life is fresh and tender and the fish never die" . . . A small epic that blends magic realism with grim realities, always memorably." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Lyrical . . . [the book is] carried along by Khalifa's ornate writing, often in the style of Middle Eastern classical poetry and lucidly translated by Price . . . There's beauty on each page" --Publishers Weekly

Praise for Death Is Hard Work Finalist for the National Book Award

"[A] brilliant, blackly absurdist road-trip novel, a restaging of As I Lay Dying in the thick of the world's most brutal civil war . . . Khalifa skillfully condenses the trip's detours and delays into a breakneck narrative that seems unstoppably tilted toward tragedy . . . Unforgettable." --Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal

"Searing . . . Khalifa is a soulful and perfectly unsentimental writer . . . Leri Price [. . .] is alive and faithful to the Syrian's unadorned and direct prose, sentences that often bring together the poetic and the horrific . . . Robust in its doubts, humane in its gaze, and gentle in its persistence." --Hisham Matar, The Guardian

"Masterly . . . Novelists like Khalifa are so critical in these times . . . With Death Is Hard Work, Khaled Khalifa has, intentionally or not, also laid claim to [Faulkner's mantle]." --Elliot Ackerman, The New York Times Book Review

"Astonishing . . . Khalifa employs a shifting array of voices and reflections, moving from perspective to perspective, present to past and back again. The effect is a persistent deepening, as stories are introduced and then revisited, details added through the play of memory . . . The power of the novel--of all Khalifa's novels--is that it unfolds within a human context, which pushes against and resists the prevailing social one." --David Ulin, Los Angeles Times