History of Ash

A Novel

Khadija Marouazi author Alexander E Elinson translator

Format:Hardback

Publisher:American University in Cairo Press

Published:1st Aug '23

£45.00

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History of Ash cover

SHORTLISTED FOR THE ERBD LITERATURE PRIZE 2024
A BEST NEW BOOK OF 2023 (THE NEW ARAB)

A NOTABLE AFRICAN BOOK OF 2023 (BRITTLE PAPER)

An unforgettable and eviscerating novel of human frailty, brutality, and resistance as told through the first-person prison narratives of a man and a woman


History of Ash is a fictional prison account narrated by Mouline and Leila, who have been imprisoned for their political activities during the so-called Lead Years of the 1970s and 1980s in Morocco, a period that was characterized by heavy state repression.

Moving between past and present, between experiences lived inside the prison cell and outside it, in the torture chamber and the judicial system, and the challenges they faced upon their release, Mouline and Leila describe their strategies for survival and resistance in lucid, often searing detail, and reassess their political engagements and the movements in which they are involved.

Written with compassion and insight, History of Ash speaks to human brutality, resilience, and the power of the human spirit. It succeeds in both documenting the prison experience and humanizing it, while ultimately holding out the promise of redemption through a new generation.

"Narrated in vivid details. . . . this is a book about fortitude, power and the sheer will to freedom." —The Daily Star

"Intense and intimate, Marouazi writes with explicit detail, compassion, and urgency. While this is a fictional account, the realities of this era of heavy state repression in Morocco and the anguish of those unjustly imprisoned are felt acutely in her brilliant prose."—The New Arab

History of Ash does not disappoint. In this devastating, lyrical novel of struggle, two prisoners in Morocco, a man and a woman, narrate their journey of resistance, imprisonment, and release during the 'Lead Years' of the 1970s and 80s."—Crime Reads

"[An] essential prison novel"—Africa in Dialogue

"An exceptional book. The author probes a forbidden, hidden world, traversing the realities of women political activists and the atrocities Arab women witnessed as they worked alongside political and cultural elites."—Samar Yazbek, author of Planet of Clay and The Crossing

“Khadija Marouazi’s History of Ash tells a powerful story of erasure and loss. Her weapon is dark satire—the peasant who does not know he belongs to a secret organization, the women who after bravely fighting for their civil rights can still poke fun at themselves despite the cruelty of their incarceration, and the mouse who sits atop a list of a secret organization's personnel. This book is like an open wound, but it is woven together with love and passion. And it is well worth reading.”—Youssef Fadel, author of A Rare Blue Bird Flies with Me

"Marouazi's novel shows a bold willingness to lay bare a harsh Morocco that we hope we have left behind, keenly and thoughtfully exposed by Elinsons’s sensitive translation.”—Yassin Adnan, author of Hot Maroc

"Unique and compelling"—R. Shareah Taleghani, author of Readings In Syrian Prison Literature

"Path-blazing"—Brahim El Guabli, Williams College

"A tragicomedy that challenges the silence of the darkness, the hissing of cold walls, the creaking of rusty doors, and the restlessness of keychains in the morning and at sunset." —Elfikr

"Not only does the author lay bare the suffering which goes on in prison, but she also writes about the repercussions of arrest on others as a group and as individuals." —Al-Hewar

ISBN: 9781649032829

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

224 pages