A calamity of noble houses

Amira Ghenim

Book - 2025

Tunisia, 1930s. Against the turbulent backdrop of a country in search of its identity, the destinies of two prominent families intertwine: the Ennaifer family, with its rigidly conservative and patriarchal mentality; and the Rassaas, open-minded and avowedly progressive. One terrible night in December 1935, the fortunes of both families are changed forever when Zbaida Ali Rassaa, the young wife of Mohsen Ennaifer, is accused of having a clandestine love affair with Tahar Haddad, an intellectual of humble origins known for his union activism and support for women's rights. The events of that fateful night are recounted by eleven different narrators, members of the two families, who recall them from different moments in time over a span ...of seventy years.--

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FICTION/Ghenim Amira
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Ghenim Amira (NEW SHELF) Due May 15, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Europa Editions 2025.
Language
English
Arabic
Main Author
Amira Ghenim (author)
Other Authors
Mīlād Fāyizah (translator), Karen McNeil
Item Description
Includes glossary.
Physical Description
376 pages : genealogical table ; 24 cm
ISBN
9798889660507
  • The Tale Of Khala Luiza (El Menzah VI, Fall 2013)
  • The Tale Of Lella Jnayna (Rue Tourbet El Bey, Summer of 1956)
  • The Tale Of Si Ali Rassaa (Rue El Azzafine, Summer of 1949)
  • The Tale Of Si Mhammed Ennaifer (Tourbet El Bey, Fall of 1971)
  • The Tale Of The Maid Khaddouj (Hôpital Aziza Othmana, Winter of 1949)
  • The Tale Of Lella Bashira (Rue El Azzafine, Fall 1949)
  • The Tale Of Lella Fawzia, The Divorced Wife Of Si Mhammed Ennaifer (Zawiya of Sidi Mehrez, Winter 1951)
  • The Tale Of Si Othman Ennaifer (Rue Tourbet El Bey, Winter 1951)
  • The Tale Of Si Mahdi Rassaa (Hammad Lif, Winter 1943)
  • The Tale Of Si Mohsen Ennaifer (Jellax Cemetery, Winter 1978)
  • The Tale Of The Beginning.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ghenim (The Yellow Dossier) offers an enthralling saga of two upper-class families linked by marriage and roiled by an explosive letter in 1935 Tunis. The contents of the note, smuggled to Zbaida Ali Rassaa in a package of bread by her former tutor, Tahar, remain a mystery throughout the novel, as 11 narrators recount their version of what happened leading up to and following the letter's interception by Zbaida's in-laws. Her father is forward-thinking enough to provide his twin daughters with an education in Arabic and French literature, but is aghast when Tahar, an intellectual from the lower classes who advocates for women's rights, emerges as a potential suitor for Zbaida. In response, he arranges for her to marry Moshen, son of the conservative Ennaifer family. As Zbaida's and Moshen's families and servants weigh in, the reader learns how Zbaida's reputation is irrevocably tainted and her fidelity questioned over the following decades. While the multiple narrators can make it challenging to keep track of the characters, Ghenim provides a rich backdrop with descriptions of Tunis's culinary traditions and Tunisia's fight for independence. Readers will be transported. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The story of a fateful night. On December 7, 1935, two wealthy Tunisian families were torn apart when a young wife and mother was accused of adultery. In Tunisian novelist Ghenim's captivating narrative, translated by Faiza and McNeill, 11 of the characters involved recall an event that has continued to haunt them for decades, revealing in their confessions and testimonies a tangled web of lies, suspicions, and betrayals, as well as a society pervaded by homophobia, classism, antisemitism, and racism. French colonialism sparked social unrest and political upheaval. Medicine was undermined by superstition; jinns, demons, and ghouls abounded; and the evil eye, it was believed, could be diverted by a Black child's face. In a rabidly patriarchal society, the accused woman, Zbaida Rassaa, grew up in a relatively progressive family. Rare among Tunisian women, she and her sisters attended a French school, and to supplement their education, their father hired a young man to tutor them in Arabic and the Quran. That tutor, Tahar Haddad, a social reformer, wrote a book criticizing women's oppression under Islamic law and advocating for women's rights--a book that proved dangerously incendiary. For years, Zbaida and Tahar had been in love, but when he dared to ask for her hand, her father summarily married her off to Mohsen Ennaifer, the son of a staunchly conservative patriarch. "There's nothing in this life more harmful to women than trying to imitate men," Mohsen's father declared about the folly of educating women. Although the urbane, cosmopolitan Mohsen shared Zbaida's pleasure in theater and music, her feelings for Tahar were not quashed by marriage and motherhood. But were they ever lovers? Ghenim keeps the reader guessing, as she does her characters, with passion and anguish, disclosing devastating secrets of lives maliciously destroyed. A stirring, engrossing tale. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.