That Other Me
A Novel
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
From the #1 internationally bestselling author of The Sand Fish, an exhilarating look at Khaleeji (Gulf-Arab) culture that explores the way secrets and betrayal consume three members of a prominent Emirati family
The head of the Naseemy family, Majed, is proud to be one of the wealthiest businessmen in Dubai. But he’s suddenly plagued by nightmares about the dead brother whose business he stole, and he feels his control erode with the discovery that his niece and daughter are defying his orders.
Mariam concentrates on her college education in Cairo, carving a path that will lead her away from her hated uncle’s controlling grip. But she falls for a brash fellow student named Adel, who might just prove to be her downfall. Meanwhile the rebellious Dalal, largely abandoned by Majed as the daughter of a second, secret marriage, strives to become a singer. It’s a career looked down on in Khaleeji societies, and one she is rightfully certain will humiliate her father.
As Majed increasingly tries to exert his authority over Dalal and Mariam, both girls resist, with explosive consequences. Set against the backdrop of the glamorous world of Arab showbiz, That Other Me explores the ties that bind one corroded family... and the tantalizing possibility of freedom.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After her successful debut novel, The Sand Fish (2009), Emirati writer Gargash returns to Dubai to paint a complex portrait of a family, as its members struggle to maintain their ties with one another and to their traditions, while consequences of enormous wealth prove more threatening than modernity or Western influence. The story unfolds through three perspectives: Majed is an affluent patriarch with grown children, who drinks in private but whose extramarital affairs have been less well hidden. Dalal is his 20-something illegitimate daughter, who has no contact with her father and has been living in Cairo with her mother, hoping to break into the music business as a singer. Their link is Mariam, Majed's obedient niece, whom he's putting through dental school (also in Cairo), and who is Dalal's unlikely best friend. The novel struggles to pick up speed, particularly as a result of its awkward prose. When, for instance, Dalal announces her upcoming appointment with someone in show business and Mariam seems confused, Dalal thinks, "She knows how much I've struggled these past 10 months to find a composer who would create a winning song for me." As Mariam's family in Dubai debates whether or not it's too modern for a young girl to be studying abroad, the dialogue remains stilted and the conversation predictable.
Customer Reviews
Incredible
An incredible peek into the Khaleeji (Gulf-Arab) culture. The reader doesn't have to be part of the culture to enjoy this great story. Dalal and Mariam are bound in their families, set in a showbiz glamour world of Arab. Riddled with secrets and internal corruption, the girls have their own dreams as they strive for freedom. It's an amazing story, with greatness of characters. It's a story that is told from different perspectives of different characters, and that can be difficult and confusing, but this is not that time.