Nubian Indigo

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Jamal Mahjoub: Nubian Indigo (EBook, 2012)

eBook, 206 pages

English language

Published Sept. 26, 2012

5 stars (1 review)

Set in the 1960's just prior to the completion of the Aswan High Dam, this novel is a fictionalised account of the last days of a small community living along the Nile in what was once the ancient kingdom of Nubia, before the area disappears beneath the floodwaters created by the dam. Based on factual accounts of the actual events and the author's knowledge of the area, Nubian Indigo is a poetic elegy to a lost world.

1 edition

A compelling story

5 stars

I love when historical fiction can completely immerse me into a time and place that I formerly knew very little about and Jamal Mahjoub's novel, Nubian Indigo, did just that. Through various characters living along the banks of a relatively short section of the Nile river in the early 1960s, I saw the disruption and disbelief they experienced on being given the news that their twenty-seven villages and one town were to be abandoned to rising floodwaters in the name of technological progress for the rest of Egypt. For these poor, rural communities, who have owned and farmed the same land for generations, the concept of the huge dam is beyond their understanding. For rich Western universities, it's a last free-for-all to plunder as many artefacts from the area as possible before the ancient tombs and archaeological sites are submerged indefinitely. And for Argin, the local District Official promoted somewhat …

Subjects

  • Historical fiction
  • 1960s