Memory of Departure explained

Author:Abdulrazak Gurnah
Language:English
Publisher:Jonathan Cape
Country:UK
Pub Date:1987
Pages:160
Followed By:Pilgrims Way

Memory of Departure is a novel by Abdulrazak Gurnah, first published in 1987 by Jonathan Cape in the United Kingdom.[1] It is Gurnah's first novel. It follows a Muslim man in an unnamed African country who seeks to be educated abroad.[2]

In a review for The New York Times, Richard E. Nicholls praised the novel as "fierce" and "vivid".[2] Kirkus referred to the novel as "artfully spare" and indicated an expectation that "more good things" were to be written by Gurnah.[3] In a 2022 article about Gurnah and his work, published by The New Yorker, Julian Lucas wrote that the novel "established a pattern that Gurnah continued to refine" through his subsequent work of "a ceaseless shuttling between the claustrophobia of home and the loneliness of exile".[4]

Notes and References

  1. Bromley . Roger . A Mind of Winter . . 1988 . 10 . 1 . 326–330 . 8 October 2021 . 0143-6597.
  2. News: Nicholls . Richard E. . IN SHORT; FICTION . 8 October 2021 . The New York Times . 17 July 1988.
  3. News: Book Reviews, Sites, Romance, Fantasy, Fiction . 8 October 2021 . Kirkus Reviews . 15 February 1988 . en.
  4. News: Lucas . Julian . A Nobel Laureate Revisits the Great War’s African Front . 30 October 2022 . The New Yorker . 17 October 2022.