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Brand:  DAR AL SHOUROUK

MODEL:  9770932310

Nadi Al Sayarat | Alaa Al Aswany

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In his long-awaited new novel, The Automobile Club, the international writer Alaa Al-Aswany returns to a world of tight construction and unique in its details, which took nearly five years to complete his creativity.

And as usual in his previous works, which achieved unprecedented success in Arabic literature and were translated into many languages of the world, the place is the hero, and the hero of this novel is the Royal Automobile Club..

With his unique style, Alaa Al-Aswany takes us to Egypt in the 1940s, to a society whose grumblings began to rise against a tampering authority, and who began to realize timidly that he had rights about which he had been silent for a long time. And between a king immersed in his own self and a chief royal servant who spends like a king above the servants and an English occupier who keeps looking at the Egyptians with contempt and arrogance, he makes comparisons between the Egyptians then and the Egyptians now, asking all the questions that occupied their minds and still puzzle us
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AED 69
Easy Payment Plan
Easy Payment Plans
EPP available for order over AED 1,000
More Info
In his long-awaited new novel, The Automobile Club, the international writer Alaa Al-Aswany returns to a world of tight construction and unique in its details, which took nearly five years to complete his creativity.

And as usual in his previous works, which achieved unprecedented success in Arabic literature and were translated into many languages of the world, the place is the hero, and the hero of this novel is the Royal Automobile Club..

With his unique style, Alaa Al-Aswany takes us to Egypt in the 1940s, to a society whose grumblings began to rise against a tampering authority, and who began to realize timidly that he had rights about which he had been silent for a long time. And between a king immersed in his own self and a chief royal servant who spends like a king above the servants and an English occupier who keeps looking at the Egyptians with contempt and arrogance, he makes comparisons between the Egyptians then and the Egyptians now, asking all the questions that occupied their minds and still puzzle us
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Books

Number of Pages
666
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