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Season of Migration to the North
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June 2015: Season of Migration to the North
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That's good to hear. I'm waiting for my copy to arrive...hopefully it will be soon.



At first Salih's style reminded me a little of Sherwood Anderson; the setting was rural, it involves characters' aspirations, the narrative style was simple, there were stories within stories etc. Now Anderson is one of my favourite authors, so the comparison is meant to be positive, but Salih's style soon took on a more dreamlike quality. Either way it was impressive.

And when the sea swallowed up the shore and the waves heaved under the ship and the blue horizon encircled us, I immediately felt an overwhelming intimacy with the sea. I knew this green, infinite giant, as though it were roving back and forth within my ribs. The whole of the journey I savoured that feeling of being nowhere, alone, before and behind me either eternity or nothingness. The surface of the sea when calm is another mirage, ever changing and shifting, like the mask on my mother's face. Here, too, was a desert laid out in blue-green, calling me, calling me. The mysterious call led me to the coast of Dover, to London and tragedy.If that doesn't compel you to read on then I don't what else will.

Yes, Jonathan I totally agree with you. I'm about half way through now.
Salih's novel is much more readable than I thought it would be. I have not read a book by a Mid-Eastern writer - ever. So I'm very pleased it was chosen for June.
The story line is very interesting, and I find myself wanting to keep reading, when I need to put it down. A very good reaction from me. I dislike having to wait to get momentum and find a rhythm.
I enjoy Gothic stories, and this is surely, Mid - Eastern Gothic.

That is very compelling.

When I was looking at the books this one just jumped out at me - that doesn't always mean that it turns out to be a good read as some bad books have good blurbs. But this was superb. I've ordered The Wedding of Zein as well as it looks like a great read.
I agree there is a gothic feel to it.

(view spoiler)

Sa'eed seems to me to be something of a fairytale character, though I don't mean that in a bad way. His detachment from other people struck me as larger than life and his whole progress by leaps and bounds through his education seems like that of a hero of a story in some ways, although reading it again, he seems more like he has some disorder or pathology. His alarming effect on women is fascinating, especially as it isn't just the British women he seems toxic to, but his wife in the village as well, although in a somewhat different way perhaps.
One of the scenes that has stayed with me is that of the elderly men sitting around with their bawdy sexual stories, and the presence of the woman in their midst who seems well able to hold her own. This isn't a scene that I would have imagined being in Arab fiction. It's interesting that what could be just a comic scene ends up in the very unfunny courtship by one of them of Sa'eed's widow, so that I wondered what Salih really made of this part himself. In the introduction, the collaboration between the translator Denys Johnson-Davies is talked about and I found it interesting that there were some erotic passages censored from the Arabic version which initially they were going to include in the English translation, but decided in the end that the two works should be more uniform. Johnson-Davies wrote "Somewhere among my papers, I possess these particular passages, written out in Tayeb's hand." In a strange way it made me feel as though Johnson-Davies was to Salih as the nameless narrator of the tale was to Sa'eed.
Finally, I thought the scene in the river where the narrator is caught halfway between the north and south shores of the river was an exceptional and beautiful metaphor for his dilemma, and by extension for those of many others.

I'm glad you liked it Seana, especially as you had it on your shelf for quite a while.
I agree with the fairytale/folkloric feel to Sa'eed's story, it was at times almost like magic realism. Sa'eed comes across as an odd sort of child but totally independent:
...I paid no attention to the astonishment of the teachers, the admiration or envy of my schoolmates...I was cold as a field of ice, nothing in the world could shake me.I still can't decide whether he did die or whether he just left. In the end it doesn't matter to the story I suppose and is better left as a mystery.
I found the style of shifting between the narrator's and Sa'eed's story effective as it added a sense of unreality to the story. When I was paying attention it was clear whose story was being told but if my attention flagged then I got confused whose story was being described, especially as their stories had many parallels.
I agree the chapter with the narrator's grandfather and his friends was great. The narrator is basically a spectator as the oldies banter with each other. The elderly, hard-drinking widow, Bint Majzoub is a brilliant character, I especially liked her good-natured but risqué put-down of Wad Rayyes: "Wad Rayyes, you're a man who talks rubbish. Your whole brain's in the head of your penis and the head of your penis is as small as your brain."

There are a couple of other groups which have read this here at GoodReads--the page is HERE. I found the extended comment by Niraj in the Middle East/North African Lit group interesting. It's pretty far down there. There is also a mention of an extended analysis at Gradesaver which looks pretty interesting although I've only read the opening thoughts so far. I think the actual Sudanese historical context is probably worth knowing.

BTW I have a copy of Salih's The Wedding of Zein which I'm planning to read soon.

Who here would like to be in charge of selecting the July book based on nominations? Seana? Let me know what you all think and I'll get another thread started for that process.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Wedding of Zein (other topics)The Wedding of Zein (other topics)
Here is the page on Goodreads where you can read more about the book's details, including the NYRB Classics blurb.
Enjoy the book and the discussion!