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The Lord by Soraya Antonius

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The Lord

Soraya Antonius, Selma Dabbagh

New York Review Books · Paperback · December 2, 2025

Reading lane: 20th-Century Historical Fiction

In this stunning portrait of Palestinian life before the Nakba, a young man gains renown as a magician of a revolutionary sort—meanwhile evading the British colonialist forces who seek to destroy him and the resistance he represents.

At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy 20th-Century Historical FictionGood for readers interested in short storiesGood for fans of Historical Fiction

Book Details

Authors
Soraya Antonius, Selma Dabbagh
Publisher
New York Review Books
Published
December 2, 2025
Format
Paperback
Theme
20th-Century Historical Fiction · World War II & Holocaust
Reading lane
20th-Century Historical Fiction

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • 20th-Century Historical Fiction

  • Visionary Fiction

  • FICTION / Middle Eastern & Arab American

About This Book

In this stunning portrait of Palestinian life before the Nakba, a young man gains renown as a magician of a revolutionary sort—meanwhile evading the British colonialist forces who seek to destroy him and the resistance he represents. A reporter posted to Lebanon in the early 1980s, covering the Israeli invasion of the time, encounters Miss Alice, an English missionary who is nearing the end of a long life in the region. With memories that go back to World War I and the start...

Read full description

In this stunning portrait of Palestinian life before the Nakba, a young man gains renown as a magician of a revolutionary sort—meanwhile evading the British colonialist forces who seek to destroy him and the resistance he represents. A reporter posted to Lebanon in the early 1980s, covering the Israeli invasion of the time, encounters Miss Alice, an English missionary who is nearing the end of a long life in the region. With memories that go back to World War I and the start of the British Mandate in Palestine, she unfolds the strangely puzzling story of one of her students, Tareq, a talented and charismatic youth who, on leaving school, took up the unlikely calling of a traveling magician. Moving from village to village, from country to city, Tareq observes the growing discontent with the colonial authorities that will erupt in a full-scale rebellion in 1936. He observes; perhaps he contributes. Among the people, he has come to be known as "the lord," while his comings and goings have also attracted the attention of Challis, the ruthless British police chief. A manhunt begins. The Lord re-creates the extraordinary richness and vivacity of Palestinian life before the Nakba, offering a view, at once panoramic and intimate, of Palestinian society and colonial occupation. A clear-eyed examination of a chapter of British colonial history that laid the groundwork for conflicts that continue to rack the Middle East, The Lord remains as timely and telling now as ever.

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