February 02, 2000
Novel by Bahiyyih Nakhjavani
Bloomsbury are about to publish Bahiyyih Nakhjavani's debut novel The
Saddlebag, based on an episode in the Dawnbreakers. It has been picked as
book of the month in the Good Book Guide and is a stunning book. I thought
the friends might like to support this remarkable achievement by purchasing
the book and have noticed that the book can be obtained from
for just 8-99 whereas it will be 14-99 in the
shops.
Here is the review from the good book guide:
In the desert a Bedouin thief steals a saddlebag, hoping to gain great
wealth from it, when pursued and surrounded he jumps, with the bag in his
arms, from a high promontory. The thief is shattered on the rocks below
but the saddlebag remains intact although certain papers are spilled from
it onto the sand.
In a first novel of astonishing power and originality the author describes
the fate of nine individuals as they travel the desert route between
Medina and Mecca in the mid-19th-century. Each of them encounters and is
subtly changed by the saddlebag, which, while it appears quite ordinary,
is apparently imbued with the power of life and death of pain and ecstacy.
Inspired by the holy books of the major religions of the world with
references to the Bhagvad Gita, the Quaran and the sayings of Buddha and
Confusius. This is both a thriller and a meditation on the ultimate goal
of human existence but most of all it is a celebration of storytelling.
At times it is horrific (tongues are cut out and throats slit with wanton
ease) but such strong fare is balanced by invention and beautiful
descriptive passages. The author tells her compelling tale with a humour
which gently mocks the extravagant behaviour of these egocentric human
beings and yet brings tears to the eyes when the saddlebag works its
magic and their spirits are released from mortal bondage. A truly
remarkable achievement.
©Copyright Rob Weinberg
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