Ebola '76 Explained

Ebola ‘76
Author:Amir Taj al-Sir
Title Orig:إيبولا 76
Orig Lang Code:ar
Translator:Charis Bredin, Emily Danby
Language:Arabic
Publisher:دار الساقي
Publisher2:Darf Publishers
Pub Date:2012
English Pub Date:2015[1]
Media Type:Print
Pages:134 pages
Isbn:9781850772743
Isbn Note:English first edition
Oclc:908925929

Ebola ‘76 (Arabic: إيبولا 76) is a 2012 novel written by Sudanese author and medical doctor Amir Taj al-Sir.[2] Originally written in Arabic, the novel recounts the 1976 Ebola outbreak in Sudan.

Plot

On a hot, humid August day in 1976, The Democratic Republic of Congo is the setting of the first major Ebola outbreak. Unfortunately, the outbreak is difficult to contain and control due to the squalid living conditions as a result of deep poverty, and the population's ignorance and apathy regarding the virus. These 2 factors help the Ebola strain to fester and spread to an epidemic affecting the city Kinshasa heavily. As luck would have it, an ordinary Sudanese factory worker by the name Lewis, who happened to stop through Kinshasa on his way back to his home, contracted the virus from an escort during an adulterous romp and consequently brought it back to his home in Nzara to subsequently spread like wildfire. The novel goes on and shows Ebola's path of destruction in Nzara through Lewis' social connections and its devastating effect on the town as a whole.

Main characters

Critical reception

Critical reception for Ebola '76 was mostly positive and the novel also received positive reader responses.[4] [5] [6] The Guardian was mixed in their review, stating that "Like a medieval danse macabre, Ebola leads a parade of wretches to the grave, but Tag Elsir’s apparent disdain for his characters robs his narrative of empathy and leaves the reader indifferent to the fate of Lewis, the blind guitarist Ruwadi, the washed‑up magician Jamadi and the rest."[7] Asymptote was more favorable, writing that "Though it is a quick fictional account, Ebola ’76 is an educational read about the emergence of the Ebola virus and how it could have possibly spread from the DRC to South Sudan."[8] Reviewing for the American Historical Association, Shatha Almutawa felt that "Despite the gravity of the subject of the novel, the language is witty and the mood light-seeing the world from the perspective of the virus, after all, is very different from seeing it from the perspective of grief-stricken men who lost their lovers."[9]

See also

References

  1. Book: Tāj al-Sirr . Amīr . Ebola '76 . WorldCat . 908925929 .
  2. Roberts. Clare. Spring 2016. Ebola '76 (review). Banipal. 55.
  3. Book: Tag Elsir, Amir. Ebola '76. Darf Publishers. 2015. London. 6.
  4. Web site: Ebola '76. Arab British Centre. 2019-04-25.
  5. Web site: Ebola personified: a cackling villain with a master plan of destruction. Cummins. Anthony. 2015-04-11. The Spectator. en-US. 2019-04-25.
  6. Web site: للقراء آراء في "إيبولا 76" . العرب. Al Arab. صحيفة العرب. ar. 2019-04-25.
  7. News: Ebola '76 by Amir Tag Elsir review – a black-comic danse macabre. Housham. Jane. 2015-06-19. The Guardian. 2019-04-25. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  8. Web site: In Review: Ebola '76 by Amir Tag Elsir. Hussain. Sawad. October 5, 2015. Asymptote. en. 2019-04-25.
  9. Web site: Summer Reading: New Historical Novels. Almutawa. Shatha. July 1, 2015. Perspectives on History. 2019-04-25.