<p>"The novel has many levels, all attempting to unravel the complexities of obligation and customs that delineate how relationships are made between father and son, mother and son, then brother and sister, and man and woman, and how these relationships can prosper and endure with man living in a changing society. The desert setting is al-Koni's strength: its expanse, desolation and mystery is powerfully evoked. At once a personal story, the legend of a god-like mythical hero, a mystical tale of demons, dreams and metamorphosis, as well as a parable of human civilization."—<strong><em>BANIPAL</em></strong><br /><br /> "A true journey into the human psyche."—<strong><em>Cairo Magazine</em></strong><br /><br /> PRAISE FOR IBRAHIM AL-KONI<br /><br /> "A magnificent novelist”—<strong>Marilyn Booth, translator of the Man Booker International Prize Winner, <em>Celestial Bodies</em></strong><br /><br /> "One of the Arab world’s most innovative novelists”—<strong>Roger Allen, University of Pennsylvania</strong><br /><br /> "Imagine Cormac McCarthy’s savage lyricism in a Paul Bowles desert landscape and you begin to enter the bleakly beautiful world of this mesmerizing, fable-like novel.”—<strong><em>The Independent</em></strong><br /><br /> "Al-Koni's story, simply and elegantly told, has all the inevitability of a Greek tragedy—or, better, all the tribulations of Job.”—<strong><em>Kirkus Reviews</em></strong><br /><br /> "Al-Koni's novels are aesthetic renderings of the passions of the desert and of the rich legends and cosmology of his people. An encyclopedic writer who has digested mythologies of the ancient world and literature of the modern world, al-Koni has both a poetic bent and a mystical inclination." —<strong>Ferial Ghazoul, <em>Al Ahram Weekly</em></strong></p>