A superbly crafted feat of storytelling. Sunday Telegraph 'An intriguing and highly charged novelAlaa Al Aswany's eponymous structure is a microcosm of modern Egyptian societyAl Aswany manages to capture the challenges facing much of the developing worlda superbly crafted feat of storytelling.' Tash Aw, Daily Telegraph A sharp, humorous novel.' Caroline Moorhead, Spectator Addictively readableThe most emotionally compelling Egyptian novel published in English since Naguib Mahfouzs Cairo Trilogy. Indendent 'It's not hard to see why this Egyptian novel has created a furore in the Arab worldIt's a fabulous, acutely observed story of human foibles, full of vivid scenes and extraordinary characters.' Mail on Sunday The stories in this novel are beautifully, simply told the characters are alive from page one. Sunday Times 'There are many stories here. The book is elaborate to bursting point, but always controlled, always whole. It is as juicy and satisfying as a shiny apple, its taste both strange and familiar, compassionate and bitter.' The Times 'In its affectionate portrait of feckless and flawed humanity, this is a rich and engaging book; in its analysis of the Islamist threat, it is a brave and indispensable one.' Daily Mail 'With its parade of big-city characters, both ludicrous and tender, its warm heart and political indignation, it belongs to a literary tradition that goes back to the 1840s, to Eugene Sue and Charles DickensThe plotting is neat, the episodes are funny and sad, and there are deaths and weddings aplenty.' Guardian Bewitching. Scotsman 'Al Aswany is excellent on the bitterness young Egyptians feel towards a country where hard-won qualifications are worthless unless backed with moneyan absorbing portrait of the struggle to survive in the Arab world's best friend of the West.' Observer
Alaa Al Aswany was born in 1957. A dentist whose first office was in the Yacoubian Building, he has written prolifically for Egyptian newspapers across the political spectrum on literature, politics and social issues. The Yacoubian Building is his second novel.