ArabLit and 7iber continue coverage of this year’s International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF) longlist – in English and Arabic — with Inaam Kachachi and Tashari, a word in the Iraqi dialect for being scattered and fragmented, as though shot from a hunting rifle.
Kachachi has published a biography, Lorna, about the British artist Lorna Hales. Her first novel Heart Springs appeared in 2005 and her second novel, The American Granddaughter, was shortlisted for IPAF in 2009.
Tashari, which was supported by the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture, deals with the tragedy of Iraqi displacement through the life of a female doctor working in southern Iraq in the 1950s. The narrative also follows her three children, who now live in three different continents, including her eldest who works as a doctor in a remote region of Canada.
Max Marin’s interview with Inaam Kachachi: On ‘Tashari’ and the Iraq She Carries With Her
Read an excerpt of Kachachi’s 2009-shortlisted novel: An American Granddaughter, trans. Nariman Youssef.
Previously featured novels:
Ashraf al-Khamaisi’s ’God’s Land of Exile′
Ibrahim Abdelmeguid’s ‘Clouds Over Alexandria’