An Unlasting Home: A Novel

┬╖ HarperCollins
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"So fresh and unsettling that it will enchant you from the first page and linger for days after reading...Its epic family saga style echoes that of Hala AlyanтАЩs┬аSalt Houses┬аand┬аThe ArsonistsтАЩ City, Ayad AkhtarтАЩs┬аHomeland Elegies, and Min Jin LeeтАЩs┬аPachinko." -- Los Angeles Review of Books

In 2013, Sara is a philosophy professor at Kuwait University, having returned to Kuwait from Berkeley in the wake of her motherтАЩs sudden death eleven years earlier. Her main companions are her grandmotherтАЩs talking parrot, Bebe Mitu; the family cook, Aasif; and Maria, her childhood ayah and the one person who has always been there for her. SaraтАЩs relationship with Kuwait is complicated; it is a country she always thought she would leave, and a country she recognizes less and less, and yet a certain inertia keeps her there. But when teaching Nietzsche in her Intro to Philosophy course leads to an accusation of blasphemy, which carries with it the threat of execution, Sara realizes she must reconcile her feelings and her place in the world once and for all.

Interspersed with SaraтАЩs narrative are the stories of her grandmothers: beautiful and stubborn Yasmine, who marries the son of the Pasha of Basra and lives to regret it, and Lulwa, born poor in the old town of Kuwait, swept off her feet to an estate in India by the son of a successful merchant family; and her two mothers: Noura, who dreams of building a life in America and helping to shape its Mid-East policies, and Maria, who leaves her own children behind in Pune to raise Sara and her brother Karim and, in so doing, transforms many lives.

Ranging from the 1920s to the near present,┬аAn Unlasting Home┬аtraces KuwaitтАЩs rise from a pearl-diving backwater to its reign as a thriving cosmopolitan city to the aftermath of the Iraqi invasion. At once intimate and sweeping, personal and political,┬аit┬аis an unforgettable epic and a spellbinding family saga.┬а

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Mai Al-Nakib was born in Kuwait and spent the first six years of her life in London, Edinburgh, and St. Louis, Missouri. She holds a PhD in English from Brown University and is an associate professor of English and comparative literature at Kuwait University. Her short story collection, The Hidden Light of Objects, was published by Bloomsbury Qatar in 2014. It won the Edinburgh International Book FestivalтАЩs 2014 First Book Award. Her stories and essays have been widely published, most recently in World Literature Today and The LA Review of Books.

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