An audio book.
1939 - Hammu, a Berber boy in a Moroccan village, is being visited by his younger cousin Mohar, 8, from Casablanca. 1955 - Hammu is now a policeman in Casablanca, working for the French. He has a strong sense of justice. He fancies Zeema. The Sultan has been deposed. Mohar is now boss of an international company. Hammu's offered promotion if he trains to use a gun. Off-duty, he gets caught up in a protest march. He saves a boy and takes him to his home. His mother, Aysha, is a whore. Hammu's polite to a client who's leaving. A charlatan, reading his palm, says that he's half Djinn. Hammu feels that he belongs to 2 worlds - not Djinn and human, but French and Moroccan. He discovers that Zeema carries guns for the rebels (the black crescent group), and that Mohar's company is in the police files, suspected of dealing in arms and drugs. Mohar's shot by the police. When Hammu confronts Zeema he discovers that she carries a cyanide pill in case she's interrogated. He sees the torture cells, hears someone being tortured to death. He feels increasingly mistrusted by Moroccans. He drops his gun rather than firing on Moroccans. His superior shoots him, but he's saved by his grandmother's metal amulet he was carrying. He's arrested, theatened with torture. Zeema, with the help of Aysha's client (an American who's influential), gets him out.
After a 17 hour bus trip he's back in his town with a job as a mediator - between locals (who try to bribe him) but also between the locals and French authority. He wonders if he's supposed to be an informer for the French. He deals with a range of citizens' complaints as fairly as he can - wife complains about her husband's performance in bed; someone complains that the old public assassin (who tells Hammu that his father was a gun-trader) didn't do what he was paid for. For successfully water-divining, he gets electricity put into his mother's house for free. His mother tries to get him married. A Frenchman is shot during a hunt. An accident? He suspects the public assassin. He discovers that Aysha, his niece, is with her. Aysha explains to him that the Frenchman tried to sleep with her when she was 11 then killed her mother. She thanks him for his help. She's excited about her future - France or America. He asks her mother if his father had really died in a car crash. She admits that he was shot by the French while delivering a cargo of guns. He wonders how she put up with him working for the French.
At the end, Morocco gains independence. Zeema arrives, still single, "an enigmatic smile curving her lips into a sweet crescent moon"
A tidy plot, and there weren't too many authentic details.
Other reviews
- Carol McGrath (Like his cat, he has many encounters with death and survives)
- whatcathyreadnext (The strong sense of community in which ties of blood are of particular importance is exemplified by Hamou’s family. But there is also a sense of change in the air, a transition from old ways to more modern ways, with some things lost in the process but others gained.)
- shereadsnovels (The book did feel very slow-paced and took much longer to read than I’d expected based on the length, but it held my interest throughout and I learned a lot from it)
- endsoftheword (The story, in fact, feels particularly authentic, and reading it is an immersive experience in a specific culture at a time of upheaval. ... On the other hand, I also had some reservations. First of all, I could not help feeling that the novel is slightly overlong ... What bothered me most, however, was the fact that the third-person narrative voice is not particularly distinctive. It certainly meets it purpose especially in the descriptive passages, but can at other times feel detached and rather bland.)