The Death of Murat Idrissi

Author:   Tommy Wieringa ,  Sam Garrett
Publisher:   Scribe US
ISBN:  

9781950354832


Pages:   112
Publication Date:   01 March 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Death of Murat Idrissi


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Author:   Tommy Wieringa ,  Sam Garrett
Publisher:   Scribe US
Imprint:   Scribe US
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 19.60cm
Weight:   0.113kg
ISBN:  

9781950354832


ISBN 10:   1950354830
Pages:   112
Publication Date:   01 March 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

[A] sleek literary thriller... While the underdeveloped Murat functions primarily as a political symbol, the women's ill-fated journey leads to an emotionally complex and ultimately chilling transformation. Wieringa hits the mark with this intelligent outing. --Publishers Weekly Brilliantly paced, this slim novel delivers a high-voltage adrenaline rush while expertly weaving in commentary about displaced world citizens... A cinematic, edge-of-your-seat thriller. STARRED REVIEW --Kirkus Reviews The sentences are concise, propelling the action along and keeping readers on the edge of their seats... a vital must-read. --Clayton McKee, Asymptote Trim, arresting story of the refugee crisis that reminds us how easy it is to dehumanize others for personal gain and self-preservation. No heroes in this one. --Blake Jordan Napa Bookmine A savagely effective little novel... A nasty masterpiece of narrative tension; it's brutally spare. --Anthony Cummins, Evening Standard The gifted Dutch writer Tommy Wieringa is a bold, intelligent stylist, unafraid of exposing the ugliness of society juxtaposed with the vagaries of human nature. [A] taut, intense contemporary thriller of multiple exploitations... The full mercilessness of the migrant dilemma is confronted here to devastating effect. --Eileen Battersby, The Observer The title of Tommy Wieringa's novel, The Death of Murat Idrissi, reveals its tragic ending: Murat, the Moroccan protagonist, will die. You know this. Yet you wait in heightened anticipation for what will happen next. The novel reads like a short story but packs such a punch that the reader is left gasping, overwhelmed by dark moments introduced casually... exploring the details that determine who occupies the top rung in any social hierarchy and who is delivered into darkness. --Necessary Fiction The Death of Murat Idrissi is a powerful tale of identity, relationships and the desire to both fit in and to escape... The Death of Murat Idrissi is a dark and deeply profound tale that examines the fragile humanity of ordinary people and exposes just how cheaply a life can be valued. FOUR STARS --Erin Britton, New Books Magazine As scintillating as it is unforgiving, this tiny diamond of a novel from Dutch author Tommy Wieringa is such a masterpiece of compression it could stand as an object lesson for students of creative writing... [A] deceptively simple, yet intricately layered, tale of complicity and exploitation. --Cameron Woodhead, The Age A compact novella pulling powerful punches. A must read. --Alice Farrant, Shiny New Books A lucidly written reflection on the migrant crisis, by a Dutch master storyteller. --Rose Shepherd, Saga Magazine Based on a shocking true story, this novel will make you question your belief in humanity... The book is short, a fast read, at an almost breathless pace. It will make you appreciate where you are now. --Sophie Foster, Q Weekend It has the grip of a nightmare that is all too plausible. --David Mills, The Sunday Times Wieringa's writing and Garrett's translation are elegant. From the creation of the Strait of Gibraltar to the aftermath of Murat's death, it is as if each sentence, each word, has been chosen with care. Both the writing and story merge into a beautiful symmetry, where it's not possible to appreciate the devastating story without appreciating the paradoxically beautiful writing. I was able to easily slip within the minds of each character, understand their motives and anxieties. For such a short novel, it felt very full. --Alice Farrant, Shiny New Books The prose is tight, the story packed into 100 pages, stripped of superfluous detail as a short story might be... Engaging and thought-provoking. --Anne Goodwin, Annecdotal All of a sudden the pace takes off, rocketing the reader to a satisfying conclusion. --Lauren Novak, Adelaide Advertiser A powerful and moving tale. It confronts the horror and cruelty of the migrant dilemma with understated but stark honesty. --Graeme Barrow, Daily Post Praise for Tommy Wieringa: The best contemporary novels are a quest made out of literary and moral ambition. Those who have successfully pursued this Holy Grail in recent times are Bolano with his The Savage Detectives, Sebald in Austerlitz, Coetzee with Disgrace and the late Philip Roth. From now on, to that august list must be added the name of Tommy Wieringa. --Le Figaro


""[A] sleek literary thriller... While the underdeveloped Murat functions primarily as a political symbol, the women's ill-fated journey leads to an emotionally complex and ultimately chilling transformation. Wieringa hits the mark with this intelligent outing."" --Publishers Weekly """"Brilliantly paced, this slim novel delivers a high-voltage adrenaline rush while expertly weaving in commentary about displaced world citizens... A cinematic, edge-of-your-seat thriller."" STARRED REVIEW --Kirkus Reviews ""The sentences are concise, propelling the action along and keeping readers on the edge of their seats... a vital must-read."" --Clayton McKee, Asymptote ""Trim, arresting story of the refugee crisis that reminds us how easy it is to dehumanize others for personal gain and self-preservation. No heroes in this one."" --Blake Jordan Napa Bookmine ""A savagely effective little novel... A nasty masterpiece of narrative tension; it's brutally spare."" --Anthony Cummins, Evening Standard ""The gifted Dutch writer Tommy Wieringa is a bold, intelligent stylist, unafraid of exposing the ugliness of society juxtaposed with the vagaries of human nature. [A] taut, intense contemporary thriller of multiple exploitations... The full mercilessness of the migrant dilemma is confronted here to devastating effect."" --Eileen Battersby, The Observer ""The title of Tommy Wieringa's novel, The Death of Murat Idrissi, reveals its tragic ending: Murat, the Moroccan protagonist, will die. You know this. Yet you wait in heightened anticipation for what will happen next. The novel reads like a short story but packs such a punch that the reader is left gasping, overwhelmed by dark moments introduced casually... exploring the details that determine who occupies the top rung in any social hierarchy and who is delivered into darkness."" --Necessary Fiction ""The Death of Murat Idrissi is a powerful tale of identity, relationships and the desire to both fit in and to escape... The Death of Murat Idrissi is a dark and deeply profound tale that examines the fragile humanity of ordinary people and exposes just how cheaply a life can be valued."" FOUR STARS --Erin Britton, New Books Magazine ""As scintillating as it is unforgiving, this tiny diamond of a novel from Dutch author Tommy Wieringa is such a masterpiece of compression it could stand as an object lesson for students of creative writing... [A] deceptively simple, yet intricately layered, tale of complicity and exploitation."" --Cameron Woodhead, The Age ""A compact novella pulling powerful punches. A must read."" --Alice Farrant, Shiny New Books ""A lucidly written reflection on the migrant crisis, by a Dutch master storyteller."" --Rose Shepherd, Saga Magazine ""Based on a shocking true story, this novel will make you question your belief in humanity... The book is short, a fast read, at an almost breathless pace. It will make you appreciate where you are now."" --Sophie Foster, Q Weekend ""It has the grip of a nightmare that is all too plausible."" --David Mills, The Sunday Times ""Wieringa's writing and Garrett's translation are elegant. From the creation of the Strait of Gibraltar to the aftermath of Murat's death, it is as if each sentence, each word, has been chosen with care. Both the writing and story merge into a beautiful symmetry, where it's not possible to appreciate the devastating story without appreciating the paradoxically beautiful writing. I was able to easily slip within the minds of each character, understand their motives and anxieties. For such a short novel, it felt very full."" --Alice Farrant, Shiny New Books ""The prose is tight, the story packed into 100 pages, stripped of superfluous detail as a short story might be... Engaging and thought-provoking."" --Anne Goodwin, Annecdotal ""All of a sudden the pace takes off, rocketing the reader to a satisfying conclusion."" --Lauren Novak, Adelaide Advertiser ""A powerful and moving tale. It confronts the horror and cruelty of the migrant dilemma with understated but stark honesty."" --Graeme Barrow, Daily Post Praise for Tommy Wieringa: ""The best contemporary novels are a quest made out of literary and moral ambition. Those who have successfully pursued this Holy Grail in recent times are Bolaño with his The Savage Detectives, Sebald in Austerlitz, Coetzee with Disgrace and the late Philip Roth. From now on, to that august list must be added the name of Tommy Wieringa."" --Le Figaro


Author Information

Tommy Wieringa was born in 1967 and grew up partly in the Netherlands, and partly in the tropics. He began his writing career with travel stories and journalism, and is the author of several internationally bestselling novels. His fiction has been longlisted for the Booker International Prize, shortlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the Oxford/Weidenfeld Prize, and has won Holland's Libris Literature Prize. Sam Garrett has translated some fifty novels and works of nonfiction. He has won prizes and appeared on shortlists for some of the world's most prestigious literary awards, and is the only translator to have twice won the British Society of Authors' Vondel Prize for Dutch-English translation.

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