A Look at 100 Books: Algerian Literature in English Translation

Which Algerian books have been translated to English, which haven’t, and which should be?

By Nadia Ghanem

*This list was updated in September 2021. Since 2018, when this article first appeared on ArabLit, Kaouther Adimi’s Our Riches, translated by Chris Andrews, was released by New Directions in 2020, and Tara Press are currently working on the translation of Rabia Djelti’s prose novel The Prophetess. Djamila Morani’s part historical, part crime fiction novel The Djinn’s Apple will be released in 2023 by Neem Tree Press, translated to the English by Sawad Hussain.*

As Algeria approaches another momentous step in its political history with a presidential election that, like Brexit, could happen or not but probably yes rather than not, what better time than to plunge into the fiction of Algerian novelists who have played, like their counterparts everywhere, the role of seers, chroniclers, time travellers, and magicians for the last century. The polyglottic nature of Algerian literature makes its access a little challenging for non-Arabic-French-Tamazight-Derja speakers. But since 1956, about 100 novels, living memoirs, and poetry collections written by Algerian writers have appeared in translation. The below is a list of these 100 titles, collected to be enjoyed.

The ‘beginning’

1956 could be said to have marked the beginning of the Algerian novel in English translation with the appearance of Mouloud Mammeri’s The Sleep of the Just, translated from the French by Len Ortzen. The original in French had appeared in 1952. But I keep a special spot in the “first in English translation” race for The Golden Ass by Apuleius, our top Amazigh scholar and eccentric. The Golden Ass was translated from Latin in 1566 by William Adlington. Sarah Ruden’s 2011 translation is recommended.

It’s well known that Algerian literature is being written in several languages nationally: in Arabic, French, Tamazight, and Derja. And, in recent years, a small number of Algerian novelists have begun to write directly in English, such as Djaffar Chetouane with his tremendous Donkey Heart Monkey Mind, Noufel Bouzeboudja with Pebble in the River, Belkacem Mezghouchene with Sophia in the White City, and the young Iheb Kharab with The Inner Light of Darkness. But writing in English is a new phenomenon, and the English language is still a new addition to Algerian novelists’ quiver of languages.

Out of the 100 titles I have so far gleaned, with more titles to unearth — particularly for the 60s and 70s, which have disclosed no info — it came as no surprise to discover that the dominant language combination is French-English. Next comes Arabic-English, with Ahlem Mosteghanemi’s and Tahar Watar’s novels. One of Waciny Laredj’s novels was announced in English translation from the Arabic last year, and although I list it here I have not yet seen further announcement or a copy. A lesser-known combination, Italian-English is notable, thanks to Amara Lakhous’ writing. Among these works, a third have appeared since 2010, which means that for the least 63 years (beginning a count down from 1956), one Algerian title plus the beginning of a new book have been translated each year.

While the Algerian novel written in Arabic is vastly neglected in translation, and also underrated, among all the languages in which Algerian literature is written, Tamazight is the least-translated. It also gets the least visibility. The work of the Kabyle poet Ahcene Mariche is an exception, thanks to friends who regularly translate his collections into English. As more Tamazight speakers become more comfortable in English, this trend might soon change.

While it is not surprising that translation efforts overwhelmingly favor French, the utter lack of interest in Algerian women’s writing is shocking. I have found only seven Algerian women accessible in English translation: Assia Djebar, Leila Sebbar, Malika Mokeddem, Nina Bouraoui, Leila Marouane, and Maissa Bey — who write in French — and then Ahlem Mosteghanemi and Zhor Ouanissi, who save the day in Arabic. My search has no doubt missed several titles, but the accurate total is unlikely to double the figure I found, and I am left to gasp at barely 10% of Algerian women’s literary production, as among that available in the English language.

How the novelist Rabia Djelti or the poet Zineb Laouedj have not appeared in translation is unanswerable. These women are of Ahlem Mosteghanemi’s ilk and generation (okay, slightly younger). Missing from this list is also the novelist and psychiatrist Yamina Méchakra, with her utterly traumatising but phenomenal La grotte éclatée, a cornerstone in Algerian literature of the late 70s.

I would have loved to have seen the dramatist H’mida Ayachi in this long list of men, and my favourite go-to novelist Chawki Amari. Tragedy and humour cannot be fully illustrated without these two.

But among those we have, The Mischief by Assia Djebar, the sensuous story of a spoilt young girl who teases a couple during her summer holiday with terrible consequences, must be reissued. Copies of it still float about, but they are shamefully hard to come by.

While novels should not be approached as guides to someone’s reality, anyone interested in 1960s and 1990s Algeria should read The Earthquake by Tahar Wattar and The Star of Algiers by Aziz Chouaki. Yasmina Khadra is by far the most translated into English, and beware even in this language his literary feats remain a game of Russian roulette, but his Inspector Llob series, starting with Morituri is exceptionally well constructed and thoroughly entertaining.

I hope someone somewhere is preparing to translate Our Wealth by young Kaouther Adimi (Nos richesses, Seuil, 2017), a fictionalized journal of Edmont Charlot, Algeria’s famous librarian on Algiers’ Hamani Street, who edited, during colonization, the first works of many a writer of Mouloud Feroun and Garcia Lorca’s cut. Fatma n’paraplui, a comix written in Derja by Safia Ouarezki, inked by her sister Soumia, with drawings by Mahmoud Benameur, Soumia’s husband, is soon to appear in French and begs to be translated in English.

I also dream to see the short story writer Zakia Allal accessible in English. Allal writes in Arabic, and her collection Nakes Veins, is deliciously creepy.

The below is provisional. Enjoy it.

  1. 1956 – The Sleep of the Just by Mouloud Mammeri, translated from the French by Len Ortzen (Cresset eds)
  2. 1958 – The Mischief by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by Frances Frenaye (Simon & Schuster)
  3. 1985 – Who Remembers the Sea by Mohammed Dib, translated from the French by Louis Tremaine (Passeggiata Press)
  4. 1986 – The Colonial Harem by Malek Alloula, translated from the French by Wlad Godzich (Univ Of Minnesota Press)
  5. 1987 – Desperate Spring: Lives of Algerian Women by Fettouma Touati, translated from the French by Ros Schwartz (The Women’s Press)
  6. 1988 – My Life Story – The Autobiography of a Berber Woman by Fadhma Amrouche, translated from the French by Dorothy Blair (Women’s Press)
  7. 1989 – Tea in the Harem by Mehdi Charef, translated from the French by Ed Emery (Serpent’s Tail)
  8. 1989 – Fantasia, an Algerian Cavalcade by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by DS Blair (Quartet Books)
  9. 1991 – Nejma by Katib Yacine, translated from the French by Richard Howard (University of Virginia Press)
  10. 1992 – The Honor of the Tribe by Rashid Mimouni, translated from the French by Joachim Neugroschel (Quartet books)
  11. 1992 – Women of Algiers in Their Apartment by Assia Djebar, translated by Marjolijn de Jager and Clarisse Zimra (CARAF)
  12. 1992 – Beneath a Sky of Porphyry by Aicha Lemsine, translated by Dorothy S. Blair (Quartet Books in the UK / published by Interlink in 1998 in the US)
  13. 1993 – A Sister to Scheherazade by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by Bente Christensen (Heinemann)
  14. 1993 – The Ogre’s Embrace by Rachid Mimouni, translated from the French by Shirley Eber (Quartet Books)
  15. 1993 – The Chrysalis by Aicha Lemsine, translated from the French by Dorothy S. Blair (Quartet Books)
  16. 1994 – The Repudiation by Rashid Boudjedra, translated from the French by Golda Lambrova (Three Continents Press)
  17. 1995 – Forbidden Vision by Nina Bouraoui, translated from the French by Melissa Marcus (Station Hill Press)
  18. 1997 – “Birth of a Writer,” by Zhour Ounissi, translated from the Arabic by Shirley Eber and Fadia Faqir, in: In the House of Names: Autobiographical Essays by Arab Women Writers (Garnet)
  19. 1998 – The Forbidden Woman by Malika Mokeddem, translated from the French by Karen Melissa Marcus (University of Nebraska Press)
  20. 1999 – So Vast the Prison by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by Betsy Wing (Seven stories Press)
  21. 2000 – The Earthquake by Tahar Wattar, translated from the Arabic by William Granara (SAQI books)
  22.  2000 – Of Dreams and Assassins by Malika Mokeddem, translated from the French by Karen Melissa (CARAF eds)
  23. 2000 – The Abductor by Leila Marouane, translated from the French by Felicity McNab (Quartet eds)
  24. 2000 – In the Name of God by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Linda Black (Toby Press)
  25. 2000 – Journal 1955-1962 by Mouloud Feraoun, translated from the French by Mary Ellen Wolf and Claude Fouillade (CARAF eds)
  26. 2000 – Banipal 7 – Special issue on Algerian Literature, with excepts from several texts originally in French and Arabic
  27. 2001 – The Savage Night by Mohammed Dib, translated from the French C. Dickson (University of Nebraska press)
  28. 2001 – The Lovers of Algeria by Anouar Benmalek, translated from the French by Joanna Kilmartin (Harvill Press)
  29. 2001 – Algerian White by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by David Kelley (Seven Stories Press)
  30. 2001 – The Sexual Life of an Islamist in Paris by Leila Marouane, translated from the French by Alison Anderson (Europa eds)
  31. 2002 – The Watchers by Tahar Djaout, translated from the French by Marjolijn de Jager (Ruminator Books)
  32. 2003 – The Selected Plays of Hélène Cixous, edited by Eric Prenowitz, translated from the French by Brian J. Mallet, Ann Liddle, Donald Watson, Bernadette Fort, and Judith G. Miller (Routledge)
  33. 2003 – The Child of an Ancient People by Anouar Benmalek, translated from the French by Andrew Riemer (Harvill Books)
  34. 2004 – L.A. Trip by Mohammed Dib, translated from the French by Paul Vangelisti (Green Integrer)
  35. 2004 – Wail of the Arab Beggards of the Casbah by Ismael Ait Djafer, translated by Jack Hirschman (NU press) [poetry, see an excerpt here. Ismael Ait Djafer was 22 years old when he wrote this poem in 40s, after the conviction of a father who killed his daughter because he could no longer feed her and was convicted captured the attention of Algerians. The poem was published in 1951, and reedited several times, notably in 1987 with a preface by Kateb Yacine.] [FR/EN]
  36. 2004 – Morituri by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by David Herman (Toby Press)
  37. 2004 – Wolf Dreams by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French Linda Black (Toby Press)
  38. 2005 – Double Blank by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Aubrey Botsford (Toby Crime)
  39. 2005 – The Poor Man’s Son by Mouloud Feraoun, translated from the French by Lucy R. McNair (CARAF)
  40. 2005 – Swallows of Kabul by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by John Cullen (Anchor eds)
  41. 2005 – The Star of Algiers by Aziz Chouaki, translated from the French by Ros Schwartz and Lulu Norman (Grayworld Press)
  42. 2005 – Homecoming by Fadila al-Faruq, translated by Dalya Cohen-Mor, in the anthology Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories
  43. 2005 – The Woman of My Dreams by Fadila al-Faruq, translated by Dalya Cohen-Mor, in the anthology Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories
  44. 2005 – The Dreadful Sea by Zhur Ounissi, translated by Dalya Cohen-Mor, in the anthology Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories
  45. 2006 – The Day I Wasn’t There by Hélène Cixous, translated from the French by Beverley Bie Brahic (Northwestern University Press)
  46. 2006 – The Tongue’s Blood Does Not Run Dry: Algerian Stories by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by Tegan Raleigh (Seven Stories Press)
  47. 2006 – Children of the New World by Assia Djebar, translated from the French by Marjolijn de Jager (The Feminist Press)
  48. 2006 – Century of Locusts by Malika Mokeddem, translated from the French by Laura Rice (University of Nebraska Press, part of their European Women Writers series)
  49. 2006 – Autumn of the Phantoms by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Aubrey Botsford (Toby Press)
  50. 2006 – La gorge tranchée du soleil/The slit throat of the sun by Hafid Gafaiti, self-translated (bilingual edition FR/EN edition), Editions L’Harmattan [poetry collection]
  51. 2007 – The Last Summer of Reason by Tahar Djaout, translated from the French by Wole Soyinka (Bison books)
  52. 2007 – Tomboy by Nina Bouraoui, translated from the French by Jehanne-Marie Gavarini and Marjorie Attignol Salvodon (Bison Books)
  53. 2007 – Voluble Nights (poetry) by Ahcene Mariche, translated by Dalila Ait Salem (self-published)
  54. 2008 – Banquet of Lies by Amin Zaoui, translated from the French by Frank Wynne (Marion Boyars eds)
  55. 2008 – Clash of Civilizations over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio by Amara Lakhous, translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein (Europa eds). This novel was originally written in Arabic by Lakhous and later reworked by him in Italian.
  56. 2008 – The Seine was Red by Leila Sebbar, translated from the French by Mildred Mortimer (Indiana University Press)
  57. 2008 – The Sirens of Baghdad by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by John Cullen (Anchor)
  58. 2008 – La tentation du désert / The temptation of the desert by Hafid Gafaiti, Editions L’Harmattan [poetry collection]
  59. 2009 – My Men by Malika Mokeddem, translated from the French by Laura Rice (University of Nebraska Press)
  60. 2009 – Above All, Don’t Look Back by Maissa Bey, translated from the French by Sonja L. Djelouah (CARAF)
  61. 2009 – Dead Man’s Share by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Aubrey Botsford (Toby Crime)
  62. 2009 – Donkey Heart Monkey Mind by Djaffar Chetouane (Chetouane Publishing Company)
  63. 2009 – An Icelandic Dream by Mohamed Magani, Casbah editions [originally written in EN]
  64. 2010 – Hearing Your Story by Nabile Fares, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (University New Orleans) [FR/EN, originally published in 2008]
  65. 2010 – The Silence of Mohammed by Salim Bachi, translated from the French by Christopher Moncrieff (Pushkin)
  66. 2010 – A Passenger from the West by Nabile Fares, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (University of Orleans Press)
  67. 2010 – An Unfinished Business by Boualem Sansal (UK edition), translated by Frank Wynne (Bloomsbury). In in the USA this novel was released as The German Mujahid.
  68. 2010 – Sophia in the White City by Belkacem Mezghouchene (self-published)
  69. 2010 – Selected Poems, Jean Sénac, translated by Katia Sainson and David Bergman (Sheep Meadow Press)
  70. 2010 – The Gates of The Sun by Nassira Belloula-Azouz, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (Editions Rafar)
  71. 2011 – At The Cafe / The Talisman by Mohammed Dib, translated from the French by C. Dickson (CARAF eds)
  72. 2011 – What the Day Owes the Night by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Frank Wynne (Heinemann)
  73. The Eternal Trauma: Mustapha Bidouche, the Unfortunate Doctor of Terrorists by Fethi Achouri, Justfiction Edition [originally written in English]
  74. 2012 – The Art of Forgetting: A Guide for Broken-hearted Women by Ahlam Mostaghanemi, translated from the Arabic by Raph Cormack (Bloomsbury)
  75. 2012 – Divorce Islamic Style by Amara Lakhous, translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein (Europa eds)
  76. 2012 – Poems for the Millenium is a stunning anthology that contains, among others, work by early and contemporary Algerian poets, translated from the Arabic, French, and Tamasheq by Pierre Joris and Habib Tengour (University of California)
  77. 2012 – Abduction by Anouar Benmalek, translated from the French by Simon Pare (Arabia Books)
  78. 2012 – The Attack by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by John Cullen (Anchor Eds)
  79. 2012 – Exile and Helplessness by Nabile Fares, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (Diálogos Books)
  80. 2012 – Exile is My Trade by Habib Tengour, translated from the French by Pierre Joris (Commonwealth Books)
  81. 2012 – Land and Blood by Mouloud Feraoun, translated from the French by Patricia Geesey (CARAF) [FR/EN, originally published in 1953]
  82. 2013 – The Barbary Figs by Rashid Boudjedra, translated from the French by Andre Naffis-Sahely (Haus Publishing)
  83. 2013 – Crossings by Habib Tengour, translated from the French by Marilyn Hacker (Post Apollo Press)
  84. 2013 – The Obstinate Snail by Rachid Boudjedra, translated from the French by Leon Stephens (Xenos books)
  85. 2013 – The New Adventures of Sinbad The Sailor by Salim Bachi, translated from the French by Sue Rose (Pushkin)
  86. 2013 – The Bridges of Constantine by Ahlem Mosteghanemi, translated from the Arabic by Raphael Cohen (Bloomsbury)
  87. 2014 – Dispute Over a Very Italian Piglet by Amara Lakhous, translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein (Europa eds)
  88. 2014 – Harraga by Boualem Sansal, translated from the French by Frank Wynne (Bloomsbury)
  89. 2014 – Chaos of the Senses by Ahlem Mosteghanemi, translated from the Arabic by Nancy Roberts (Bloomsbury)
  90. 2015 – Arabic as a Secret Song by Leïla Sebbar, translated by Skyler Artes (CARAF)
  91. 2015 – Father / Son by Abdelkader Djemai, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (Dialogos eds)
  92. 2015 – The Meursault Investigation by Kamel Daoud, translated from the French by John Cullen (Other Press)
  93. 2015 – The African Equation by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Howard Curtis (Gallic Books)
  94. 2015 – The Dictator’s Last Night by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Julian Evans (Gallic Books)
  95. 2015 – Pebble in the River by Noufel Bouzeboudja (African Books Collective)
  96. 2015 –The Funerals: A Novel of the Algerian Civil War by Rachid Boudjedra, translated by André Naffis-Sahely (Haus Publishing). The paperback version was announced in 2017 but none of the versions seem to be available. [FR/EN, originally published in 2003]
  97. 2016 – France, Story of a Childhood by Zahia Rahmani, translated from the French by Lara Vergnaud (Yale University Press)
  98. 2016 – The Angels Die by Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French by Howard Curtis (Gallic books)
  99. 2016 – The Dust of Promises by Ahlem Mosteghanemi, translated from the Arabic by Nancy Roberts (Bloomsbury)
  100. 2016 – The Butterly Kingdom by Waciny Laredj, translated from the Arabic (Katara Books). No info on translator.
  101. 2016 – The Prank of the Good Little Virgin of Via Ormea by Amara Lakhous, translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein (Europa eds)
  102. 2016 – Confidence and Memories (poetry) by Ahcene Mariche, translated by Dalila Ait Salem (self-published)
  103. 2016 – The Spinning Top and the Ladder (poetry) by Ahcene Mariche, translated by Camelia Ben Mammar (Art Plume editions) [Kabyle/EN]
  104. 2016 – The Inner Light of Darkness by Iheb Kharab (self-published)
  105. 2016 – Father/Son by Abdelkader Djemaï, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (Dialogos eds)
  106. 2017 – Inside the Battle of Algiers: Memoir of a Woman Freedom Fighter by Zohra Drif, translated from the French by Andrew Farrand
  107. 2017 – Exile: Women’s Turn – Poem of East and West by Nabile Fares, translated from the French by Peter Thomspon (Dialogos eds)
  108. 2017 2084 The End of the Word by Boualem Sansal, translated from the French by Alison Anderson (Europa eds)
  109. 2018 – Do You Hear in the Mountains… and Other Stories by Maïssa Bey, translated from the French by Erin Lamm (CARAF)
  110. 2018 – Chroniques: Selected Columns, 2010-2016 by Kamel Daoud, translated Elisabeth Zerofsky
  111. 2019 – Muslim: A Novel by Zahia Rahmani, translated from the French by Matt Reeck (Deep Vellum Publishing) [FR/EN, originally published in 2005]
  112. 2019 – Albert Camus, Jean Sénac, or The Rebel Son by Hamid Nacer-Khodja, translated from the French by Kai Krienke (Michigan State University Press). The Algerian scholar Nacer-Khodja gathered letters exchanged between Camus and the poet Jean Sénac. [FR/EN, originally published in 2010]
  113. 2020 – The Olive Trees’ Jazz and Other Poemsby Samira Negrouche, translated by Marilyn Hacker (Pleiades Press, February) [FR/EN, 2010]
  114. 2020 – Our Riches (USA title) / A Bookshop in Algiers (UK title) by Kaouther Adimi, translated by Chris Andrews (New Directions) [FR/EN, originally published in 2017]
  115. 2020 – Mansour’s Eyes by Ryad Girod, translated by Chris Clarke (Transit Books) [FR/EN, originally published in 2018]
  116. 2020 – The Streets of Algiers by Anna Greki, translated by Cristina Vita and Souheila Haimiche (Smokestack Books) [FR/EN]
  117. 2020 – The Discovery of The New World by Nabil Fares, translated from the French by Peter Thompson (Dialogos eds)
  118. 2021 – Zabor, and the Psalms by Kamel Daoud, translated by Emma Ramadan (Others Press) [Novel, FR/EN, originally published in 2018]
  119. 2021 – All the Men I Want to Know by Nina Bouraoui, translated by Aneesa Abbas Higgins (Penguin, May 2021)
  120. The Disappearance of Mr. Nobody by Ahmed Taibaoui, translated by Jonathan Wright (Hoopoe Press) [AR/EN, originally published in 2020]
  121. forthcoming 2023The Djinn’s Apple by Djamila Morani, translated by Sawad Hussain [Novel, AR/EN, originally published in 2015], to be released by Neem Tree Press. See excerpt in English published by World Without Borders.
  122. forthcoming The Prophetess by Rabia Djelti, Tara Press. [Novel in prose, AR/EN, originally published in 2014]

Bonus story: “Lethal Parallax” by Chawki Amari, translated from the French by Lauren Broom (Asymptote Journal).

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nadiaDr. Nadia Ghanem is ArabLit’s Algeria Editor. Based between Algeria and the UK, she blogs  at tellemchaho.blogspot.co.uk about living in Algeria, and Algerian literature.