MAY 2018 - AudioFile
Peter Ganim's considerable experience narrating stories set in the Middle East makes him an obvious choice for this science fiction collection set in Iraq. His accurate pronunciation of the Arabic words sprinkled throughout these stories is a key part of listeners’ feeling transported to another country. Ganim deploys his considerable range to capture the colorful characters and settings of this unique collection. Listeners can enjoy the stories in order or skip around at their leisure through works centered on universal human emotions like love, loss, and suffering. What makes them a unique listening experience is how the collection imagines an Iraq of the future, a hundred years from the invasions that have caused such devastation. M.R. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
From the Publisher
Praise for Iraq + 100
“Painful, difficult, and necessary; often beautiful, always harrowing. If that sits awkwardly with the conventions of Western science fiction that imagine dystopias at arm's length and totalitarianism as fanciful thought-experiment, then perhaps now more than ever is the time for those conventions to change.”—NPR
“Dazzling and disorienting, these stories are not just reflections of turmoil…there’s also an undercurrent of perseverance and compassion, not to mention the sheer pleasure of unleashing the imagination and the written word.”—The Atlantic
“Inventive and surprising, these tales, many of which are translated, blend the surreal with the commonplace, pushing the boundaries of speculative fiction. Readers will savor each story as it probes the deeper questions of existence and the possibilities and perils of the future. This is a must-read for all science fiction enthusiasts.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“This powerful collection of Iraqi speculative fiction packs a twofold punch: intriguing futuristic stories melded by a shared, painful past...these tales aren't always comfortable reading, but fans seeking diverse sf will appreciate this anthology.”—Library Journal, starred review
“Tales that will intrigue, unsettle and inspire…these stories serve as a moving, perceptive commentary on Iraq, and, indeed, the world, and offer several intriguing visions of the future.”—RT Book Reviews
Praise for Hassan Blasim
“If a short story could break the heart of a rock, this might just be the one….” –The New York Times on The Corpse Exhibition: And Other Stories of Iraq
“Brilliant and disturbing… bitter, furious and unforgettable.” –Wall Street Journal on The Corpse Exhibition
“Blasim deserves a wider audience, one ready to be shocked and awed by these pitch-black fairytales.” –The National on The Corpse Exhibition
“Brutal, vulgar, imaginative, and unerringly captivating…A searing, original portrait of Iraq.” –Publishers Weekly on The Corpse Exhibition
“Powerful, moving and deeply descriptive.” –Kirkus Reviews on The Corpse Exhibition
“Blunt and gruesome.” –The Huffington Post on The Corpse Exhibition
“Bolaño-esque in its visceral exuberance, and also Borgesian in its gnomic complexity… a master of metaphor.” –The Guardian on The Iraqi Christ
“At first, you receive Blasim with the kind of shocked applause you’d award a fairly transgressive stand-up. You’re quite elated. Then you stop reading it at bedtime. At his best, Blasim produces a corrosive mixture of broken lyricism, bitter irony and hyper-realism which topples into the fantastic and the quotidian in the same reading moment.” –M John Harrison
Library Journal
★ 09/15/2017
The 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq changed that Middle Eastern nation forever. For many Iraqi authors, notes editor Blasim (The Corpse Exhibition), the idea of trying to imagine their country 100 years later is overshadowed by the reality of present-day life as well as the lack of a tradition of genre writing, especially sf. Still, Blasim has brought together ten writers, both living in Iraq and in exile. The future they imagine is not always positive. Anoud's "Kahramana" tells of a young woman whose attempts to escape an ISIS-style group is thwarted by bureaucratic red tape at the American-held border. An Iraqi soldier, the hero of Ali Bader's "The Corporal," is killed during the invasion and wakes up a century later in his hometown of Kut, now unfamiliar and frightening in its peacefulness. In 2103 Kirkuk, the past has been obliterated for the people's protection, but the old songs cannot be entirely drowned out in Khalid Kaki's "Operation Daniel." VERDICT This powerful collection of Iraqi speculative fiction packs a twofold punch: intriguing futuristic stories melded by a shared, painful past. In holding up a mirror to America's actions from 2003, these tales aren't always comfortable reading, but fans seeking diverse sf will appreciate this anthology.—KC
MAY 2018 - AudioFile
Peter Ganim's considerable experience narrating stories set in the Middle East makes him an obvious choice for this science fiction collection set in Iraq. His accurate pronunciation of the Arabic words sprinkled throughout these stories is a key part of listeners’ feeling transported to another country. Ganim deploys his considerable range to capture the colorful characters and settings of this unique collection. Listeners can enjoy the stories in order or skip around at their leisure through works centered on universal human emotions like love, loss, and suffering. What makes them a unique listening experience is how the collection imagines an Iraq of the future, a hundred years from the invasions that have caused such devastation. M.R. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine