cover image Roundabout of Death

Roundabout of Death

Faysal Khartash, trans. from the Arabic by Max Weiss. New Vessel, $16.95 trade paper (176p) ISBN 978-1-939931-92-4

Khartash’s sparse and harrowing English-language debut offers an account of life in Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War. Arabic teacher Jumaa Abd al-Jaleel looks back on the disruptions to daily life in the decimated city as the fighting broke out in 2012: the sniper and bomb attacks, his school turned into a shelter, and afternoons spent in a café with other underemployed men, a safe haven for conversation away from soldiers. When he cannot reach his mother by telephone, he takes a circuitous route to investigate, only to find a nearby square destroyed by a bomb. In his mother’s building, she appears at the door, “an old lady... someone I barely recognized.” He takes a temporary job hocking grilled meat and learns his son, Nawwar, has been arrested at the university. The narrator’s wife becomes fixated on getting Nawwar supplies as they receive differing reports about his anticipated release. She also demands they leave Aleppo, pushing the narrator on a long journey to the capital of ISIS-held territory in hopes of finding a less volatile place to live. Throughout, the narrator maintains a detached tone, sometimes referring to himself in the third person, which, combined with the episodic storytelling, credibly captures his processing of trauma. Readers will find this fragmented tale of war-torn Aleppo and its displaced intellectuals chilling and insightful. (May)