Midaq Alley (1947) was first translated by Trevor LeGassick and published in English in 1966. The new translation, which is being completed by Humphrey Davies, is scheduled for release this November, a month before what would’ve been Mahfouz’s 100th birthday.
Even if there had not been numerous complaints about variable quality in the Mahfouz translations (as indeed there have), re-translation is still an excellent way to re-discover an author and a novel. AUCP is also bringing out a centennial library and The Wisdom of Naguib Mahfouz, ed. Aleya Serour.
Five other AUCP books to look forward to this fall:
Judgment Day, by Rasha al-Ameer, trans. Jonathan Wright.
A Tunisian Tale, by Hassouna Mosbahi, trans. Max Weiss.
Dr. Weiss also recently translated Solo Piano Music by International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF)-shortlisted Fawwaz Haddad; I believe that’s still in search of a publisher.
Time of White Horses, by Ibrahim Nasrallah, trans. Nancy Roberts
Brooklyn Heights, Miral al-Tahawy, trans. Samah Selim
According to blogger Ismail Fayyed: “Brooklyn Heights (the story itself) is memorable not only for giving voice to marginal, oppressed, sometimes silent female characters but for evoking a vanishing world of those forced to leave their homeland and is filled with ‘winds of longing’ and distinctive scents.”
The Palm House, Tarek Eltayeb, trans. Kareem James Abu-Zeid
Khalifa adds: “This is a marvelous novel about being a stranger in a strange land, and about lonely people trying to find comfort in each other. But, above all, this is a novel about storytelling, its magic, and its power to heal. Unmissable.”
Other 2011 AUCP publishing notes:
Suzanne Mubarak’s memoir about reading to her grandson has been retitled. (You know, it’s no longer a “first lady’s memoir.”)
Mai Khaled’s book, The Magic of Turquoise, is also coming out this fall, translated by our friend Marwa Elnaggar. Marwa will have to tell us more about the book.
William Hutchins also has been working on a translation of the novel Yusuf’s Picture by Najm Wali, which was scheduled out from AUC Press this fall.
