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Anatomy of a Disappearance

Dial. Jun. 2011. 240p. ISBN 9780385340441. $22; eISBN 9780679643982. FICTION
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Matar's debut novel, In the Country of Men, won six international prizes, including the Commonwealth Writer's Prize (Europe and South Asia) for Best First Novel and the inaugural Arab American Book Award. It was also a finalist for the Man Booker, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the Guardian First Book Award. Oh, and I found it searing, evocative, and original. Here is Matar's second work, featuring an 11-year-old born in exile after his parents flee revolutionary upheaval. Following his mother's death, Nuri and his father become entranced with half-English, half-Arab Mona when they spy her in a yellow bathing suit by the hotel swimming pool. Obviously, there will be complications, even tragedy. First serial rights were sold to The New Yorker. Get it.
Whereas Matar's debut, In the Country of Men (shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize), focuses on political brutality, this much subtler novel only hints at violence. Again, though, it is told from a child's perspective, that of 11-year-old Nuri, who lives in exile in Cairo with his Arab father. A love triangle of sorts develops when the father marries a younger woman desired by the son. When the father goes missing, the son seeks answers and learns some surprising truths about his father's life. Nuri's relationship with his young stepmother, Mona, is the novel's most compelling element; there's plenty of tension as their connection changes over the years. The revelations in the final pages are compelling, too, with the book's evocative tone of loneliness and displacement. Some mysteries, however, such as the cause of Nuri's mother's death, are left unresolved, and the scenes set at Nuri's boarding school could be further developed. Still, this is an engrossing tale, made more so by the knowledge that the author's father, an anti-Gadhafi activist, also disappeared.
VERDICT Recommended for fans of Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner. [See Prepub Alert, 2/14/11.]—Evelyn Beck, Piedmont Technical Coll., Greenwood, SC
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