Ali al-Muqri’s novels have inflamed the Arab literary scene for 30 years. Most of us don’t know what we would be like if forced to flee our homes in the face of death threats, but all of us would like to imagine we’d be like Ali al-Muqri. The mustachioed Yemeni author, now exiled with his family in Paris, has a quick grin and a stylish jacket, and while he says his French isn’t good enough to answer questions about his work — he spoke to OZY through a translator — it’s more than good enough to order a glass of wine. Al-Muqri, 52, has only had one of his books translated into English. But the rest of his oeuvre — which tackles war, sex and religion — has long ruffled feathers and inspired accolades across the Arab world. He’s twice been longlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction and was the runner-up for France’s Arab Literature Prize in 2015. Insisting that none of his subjects are shocking or that he’s breaking taboos, he has returned time and again to explore the lives of marginalized people in Yemeni society, humanizing those who are often dismissed while charging headlong into cultural minefields. |