"Describes in poetic, incantatory language the city's domestic life . . . [and] around this private world swirl the politics of the 1950s in Iraq." --
New York Times Book Review "Employs shifts of narrative perspective and a sophisticated technique in this affectionate but critical dissection of her culture. . . . [
Naptalene] is a pungent, episodic glimpse of childhood in a patriarchal society . . . often intense and lyrical." --
Kirkus "Mamdouh's prose is at once lush and refreshingly earthy . . . she anchors her tale with a spirited and highly sympathetic narrator coming of age in a Baghdad long gone." --
Publishers Weekly "The first novel by an Iraqi woman to be published in English in the United States . . . is a hallucinatory incantation, a fevered dream and nightmare and, finally, a lyrical evocation of a place disappeared." --
Ms. "Ferocious, visceral descriptions . . . give a powerful sense not only of Huda's world but also of the way we make and understand memories." --
Booklist "The story of Huda, a young girl growing up in Baghdad during the 1940s and 1950s . . . leaves an indelible impression. Her world is rich with family and neighbors and she notes all of their subtle interactions and secrets." --
Library Journal "Beautifully evokes the sounds and scents of old Baghdad, as in her descriptions of Friday night prayers: stained tiles and worshipers with sweat-glistened faces, bare feet and non-stop supplications, incense and perfumes." --
The Washington Post Book World "Couldn't be more timely . . .[the novel] subjects one Baghdad neighborhood to the scrutiny of a child who observes its deepest divisions and secrets, providing a profoundly human portrayal of the city that makes it more real, in many ways, than a view through a plasma TV ever could." --
In These Times "
Naphtalene sings life at its most intense . . . Alia Mamdouh's stunning gesture is to have turned over the keys of the narrative to the violent sensitivities and superior intelligence of childhood.
Naphtalene is an enchantment bordering on myth. . . . A marriage of the primordial and of modernity, of fury and of love." --
Helene Cixous, from the Foreword "In the long lost Baghdad of childhood, where love and subversion and respect are melted in a pot of poetry and illusion, the life of a family and their neighbors evolves around the female energy moving between a memorable grandmother and her rule-breaking granddaughter.
Naphtalene is a beautiful novel that will help preserve in our hearts the memory of a city systematically being destroyed under our very eyes." --
Luisa Valenzuela, author of He Who Searches "Sinuous, lyrical, and elliptical, this lovely novel is suffused with passion and public drama." --
Diana Abu-Jaber, author of Arabian Jazz
The first novel by an Iraqi woman to be published in the United States, Naphtalene is the coming-of-age story of a young Iraqi girl looking to establish her female identity amidst an oppressive patriarchal society and an impending revolution.
Nine-year-old Huda is fierce, precocious, and - as described by her bullying father - more like a boy than a girl. Through her eyes, we see the growing resistance to British colonial influence in 1950s Baghdad as Huda becomes aware of the restrictions placed on her as an Iraqi girl. Surrounded by unhappy women chained to their fates, free-spirited Huda rebels against the expectations of her society. She explores the sensuality of being a young woman, defying the men who hem her in. Huda's proud journey towards womanhood is framed by Alia Mamdouh's fiery and lyrical prose, which brings us the sights and sounds of Baghdad against the backdrop of political turmoil.