The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

by Lucette Lagnado

Narrated by Joyce Bean

Unabridged — 12 hours, 21 minutes

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

by Lucette Lagnado

Narrated by Joyce Bean

Unabridged — 12 hours, 21 minutes

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Overview

"Poignant . . . deeply personal . . . an indelible history of the largely forgotten Jews of Egypt . . . "-Miami Herald

In vivid and graceful prose, Lucette Lagnado re-creates the majesty and cosmopolitan glamour of Cairo in the years before Gamal Abdel Nasser's rise to power. With Nasser's nationalization of Egyptian industry, her father, Leon, a boulevardier who conducted business in his white sharkskin suit, loses everything, and departs with the family for any land that will take them. The poverty and hardships they encounter in their flight from Cairo to Paris to New York are strikingly juxtaposed against the beauty and comforts of the lives they left behind.*

An inversion of the American dream set against the stunning portraits of three world cities, Lucette Lagnado's memoir offers a grand and sweeping story of faith, tradition, tragedy, and triumph.


Editorial Reviews

Michiko Kakutani

In The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit Ms. Lagnado—an investigative reporter at The Wall Street Journal—gives us a deeply affecting portrait of her family and its journey from wartime Cairo to the New World. Like Andre Aciman in his now classic memoir, Out of Egypt (1994), she conjures a vanished world with elegiac ardor and uncommon grace, and like Mr. Aciman she calculates the emotional costs of exile with an unsentimental but forgiving eye. This is not simply the story of a well-to-do family’s loss of its home, its privileges and its identity. It is a story about how exile indelibly shapes people’s views of the world, a story about the mathematics of familial love and the wages of memory and time.
—The New York Times

The Washington Times

We have a writer who looks at old Egypt from a unique point of view that combines the insiderishness and deeply felt insights of the native with the hard-edged realism of the probing, intelligent outsider...It is the splendid achievement of "The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit" that it does not stop at being the loving evocation of a family that it indubitably is. Ms. Lagnado has also given us a timely and important reminder about the unwillingness of Arab nationalism to tolerate non-Arab communities.

This not only inflicted a deep wound on the ancient cities of Cairo and Alexandria, with tragic consequences for them and the people displaced from their midst, but it also has wider resonances for others in the region, notably the people of Israel and the Kurds. "The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit" is full of sentiment, information and wisdom, at once deeply affecting and profoundly disturbing.
—Martin Rubin

Miami Herald

Lagnado, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, wrote eloquently about her family's exodus from Cairo to New York, exposing an untold story of almost a million Jewish refugees forced to leave their homes and striking a chord with readers across the world.
—Connie Ogle

The Jewish Week

The strength of this memoir is in the writer's prose, at once graceful and powerful. Reporting on her father with the awe of a child and the wisdom of a grown-up, she manages to make the reader understand his charm and foibles and her love for him, and to feel his loss deeply. She also captures her extended family and the complexities of their lives and longings with depth and compassion. She joins memoirists Andre Aciman ("Out of Egypt") and Gini Alhadeff ("The Sun at Midday") in writing lyrical, personal books that are important documents of communities that have been extinguished.
—Sandee Brawarksy

The New York Times Sunday Book Review

...the reality of the Lagnados' fate is so far from the triumphalism that Americans have come to expect from immigrant narratives - is one of many reasons to read this crushing, brilliant book...In this book, she so effortlessly captures the characters in her family, and the Egyptian metropolis around them, that the reader may fail to notice the overwhelming research buttressing this story. But then you stumble upon a wonderfully vivid detail: the kind of stove used by her grandmother, what her mother was drinking when she met Leon, the exact menu of the elaborate meals served to a relative struck with pleurisy.
—Alana Newhouse

Kirkus Reviews

Bittersweet memoir unveils a nearly forgotten era of Jewish-Muslim affinity in the streets of Egypt's capital. "The Jews of Aleppo were a breed apart," writes Wall Street Journal reporter Lagnado of her father's origins, "intensely Jewish, intensely Arab." The author documents her almost fairy-tale upbringing in a Syrian family that fled to Egypt at the turn of the 20th century. Her father Leon was himself a contradiction, she recalls: a French speaker in the bosom of his family, fluent in street Arabic, yet charmingly conversant in English with the British officers with whom he socialized. While a devout attendee at morning prayers and Friday synagogue, he remained an energetic nocturnal boulevardier even after marriage to the much younger Edith. King Farouk's almost bizarrely cosmopolitan Cairo served as Leon's carefree adult playground throughout World War II and the following decade. The author, born in 1956 into a marriage strained to the breaking point, developed a bond with her father that enabled her to experience through his sad eyes the gradual dissolution of cultural harmony among Cairo's Arabs, Jews and leftover colonials. One of her cherished icons was Groppi's, an incomparable French patisserie in the heart of the city. But the 1956 Nasser coup was followed by war with the still-new State of Israel, and migration became the inevitable fate of Cairo's Jews. The Lagnados eventually departed for New York, where Leon, his world exploded, was finally forced to face the 20th century. Nostalgic but objectively tempered portrait of a family at the heart of social and cultural upheaval. Agent: Tracy Brown/Wendy Sherman Associates

From the Publisher

Beautifully written.... A great personalized telling of Egypt’s complicated history in the last half of the 20th century.” — Fareed Zakaria

“Like André Aciman...she conjures a vanished world with elegiac ardor and uncommon grace.” — Michiko Kakutani, New York Times

“[A] crushing, brilliant book…one final kiss from the Lagnados to their beloved city.” — New York Times Book Review

“This memoir of an Egyptian Jewish family’s gradual ruin is told without melodrama by its youngest survivor.” — The New Yorker

“The resilient dignity of Lucette’s family transcends the fiercest of obstacles.” — Los Angeles Times Book Review

“Lagnado gets to the heart of the modern exodus in a way only those who lived it can.” — Miami Sun Post

“Captivating…illuminates its places and times, providing indelible individual portraits...An exceptional memoir.” — Booklist (starred review)

“Excellent new memoir… One could praise Ms. Lagnado’s book for many things.” — New York Sun

“Full of emotion and longing, yet never sentimental, this lyrical memoir evokes a cosmopolitan Cairo.” — Jewish Woman

“Lagnado spares nothing in the retelling…in this tender and captivating memoir.” — The Oregonian (Portland)

“It succeeds especially as a... heartfelt elegy to the long-lost Cairo community of her youth.” — Library Journal

“Nostalgic but objectively tempered portrait of a family at the heart of social and cultural upheaval.” — Kirkus Reviews

“Beautifully written . . . rich with history and insight. Wonderful.” — Oscar Hijuelos, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of THE MAMBO KINGS PLAY SONGS OF LOVE

“A stunning achievement.” — Andre Aciman, author of OUT OF EGYPT and CALL ME BY YOUR NAME

“A subtle and eloquent description of fatherly love and a mesmerizing portrait of a man shattered by the immigration experience.” — Marianne Pearl, author of A MIGHTY HEART

“Lagnado’s richly textured memoir is a loving tribute to a lost man and a lost culture.” — Reform Judaism

Fareed Zakaria

Beautifully written.... A great personalized telling of Egypt’s complicated history in the last half of the 20th century.

New York Sun

Excellent new memoir… One could praise Ms. Lagnado’s book for many things.

The New Yorker

This memoir of an Egyptian Jewish family’s gradual ruin is told without melodrama by its youngest survivor.

The Oregonian (Portland)

Lagnado spares nothing in the retelling…in this tender and captivating memoir.

Miami Sun Post

Lagnado gets to the heart of the modern exodus in a way only those who lived it can.

Los Angeles Times Book Review

The resilient dignity of Lucette’s family transcends the fiercest of obstacles.

Jewish Woman

Full of emotion and longing, yet never sentimental, this lyrical memoir evokes a cosmopolitan Cairo.

Booklist (starred review)

Captivating…illuminates its places and times, providing indelible individual portraits...An exceptional memoir.

New York Times Book Review

[A] crushing, brilliant book…one final kiss from the Lagnados to their beloved city.

Reform Judaism

Lagnado’s richly textured memoir is a loving tribute to a lost man and a lost culture.

Marianne Pearl

A subtle and eloquent description of fatherly love and a mesmerizing portrait of a man shattered by the immigration experience.

Andre Aciman

A stunning achievement.

Oscar Hijuelos

Beautifully written . . . rich with history and insight. Wonderful.

The New Yorker

This memoir of an Egyptian Jewish family’s gradual ruin is told without melodrama by its youngest survivor.

Los Angeles Times Book Review

The resilient dignity of Lucette’s family transcends the fiercest of obstacles.

Booklist

"Captivating…illuminates its places and times, providing indelible individual portraits...An exceptional memoir."

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173948113
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 05/19/2020
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit
My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

Chapter One

The Days and Nights of the Captain

On the first Thursday night of every month, Cairo grew completely still as every man, from the pashas in their palaces to the fellahin in their hovels, huddled by the radio and motioned to their wives and children not to disturb them. It was the night when Om Kalsoum, the Nightingale of the Nile, the greatest singer Egypt had ever known, broadcast live from a theater in the Ezbekeya section, her voice so transcendent and evocative that her fans could picture exactly how she looked as she came out onto the stage, enveloped in the lush white lace dress that softened and transformed her features.

This daughter of a village sheik had a cult following—porters and potentates, the intellectual elite and the illiterate masses, the beggars and the king—especially the king. But the most passionate audience for her songs about lost love and unrequited love and love forsaken weren't starry-eyed housewives but their husbands and brothers and grown sons.

To them, she was simply al-Sitt, the Lady.

She'd begin promptly at nine, fluttering her white voile handkerchief this way and that. Since each of her songs could last half an hour or more, her concerts went on well past midnight. "In the Name of Love," "What Is Left for Me?" "Tomorrow, I Leave," or her poignant classic "Ana Fintezarak"—"I Am Waiting for You"—they had heard these songs a thousand times, yet they still found them enrapturing, especially the verses that she would repeat over and over, each time with aslightly different inflection, a varied tempo, a changed mood.

It was the only night my father didn't leave the house or even his chair. He'd sit as close as possible to the radio, unable to pull himself away.

In the years before he met Edith, my father led the life of a consummate bachelor. He was rarely home, and when he left the apartment on Malaka Nazli Street he shared with his mother, Zarifa, and his young nephew, Salomone, it was not to return till dawn. His womanizing was the stuff of legend, as much a part of his mystique as his white suits, and there were countless other women before my mother, including, some whispered, the Diva.

Except for Friday nights, he didn't even bother to stay for supper. If he came back at all after work, it was to go immediately to his room and dress for the evening ahead, an elaborate ritual that he seemed to enjoy almost as much as what the night held in store.

He was meticulous and more than a little vain. He had assembled a wardrobe made by Cairo's finest tailors in every possible fabric—linen, Egyptian cotton, English tweed, vicuna, along with shirts made of silk imported from India. There were also the sharkskin suits and jackets he favored above all others, especially to wear at night. These were carefully hung in a corner of the closet, and if the local macwengi, or presser, dared to bring back a pair of trousers without the crease or fold exactly so, Leon would berate him and make him redo the job.

He always wore a diamond ring, and for the evening, he would add a tie clip in the shape of a horseshoe. White gold, encrusted with several diamonds, the clip was his good-luck talisman, and like all men who enjoy the shuffle of a deck of cards and the spin of the roulette wheel, my father was a firm believer in lucky charms.

His final act was to dab the eau de cologne Arlette on his hands and neck and temple. It was a popular, locally made aftershave with a fresh citrusy scent that conjured the Mediterranean. Long after he'd left, the house still bore what the Egyptians would call, in their characteristic mixture of French and Arabic, le zeft du citron—the waft of lemon.

As he went out, Salomone, my teenage cousin from Milan, would poke his head from behind the novel he was reading to bid him good night, a tad enviously perhaps, and Zarifa would kiss both his cheeks lovingly but with some reproach in her magnificent blue eyes.

My grandmother came from Aleppo, the ancient city in Syria whose culture was far more rigid and conservative than Cairo's. She was troubled by her son's nightly forays and the fact he was still unattached and showed no desire whatsoever to settle down. Even now, in his forties, his restlessness continued to get the better of him. Until Edith, he never brought a woman home to Malaka Nazli, as that would mean she was the chosen one, and he had no desire to choose.

My father was a study in motion, taking long, brisk military strides early each morning to get from the house to his synagogue, then on to his business meetings, his cafés, and in the evening, his poker game and his dancing and his women. Because he tried to stay out of the house as much as possible, how convenient that his bedroom was at the front, facing Malaka Nazli, the wide, graceful boulevard named in honor of Queen Nazli, Farouk's mother. Because his room was only a couple of feet away from the door, he could slip in and out as he pleased.

Years later, I would hear that the lustrous lady of song, the devoutly Muslim Om Kalsoum, who was raised in a remote village where her dad had been the imam, had been my father's mistress. It was one of the many stories that persisted about my dad's prowess with women before and likely after he was married.

What I heard not simply about his womanizing but about every sphere of his life had a mythic quality, so outsize as to seem apocryphal. There was the fanatical devotion to religion and the hedonistic streak that compelled him to venture out in search of all that Cairo had to offer. There was the . . .

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit
My Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World
. Copyright © by Lucette Lagnado. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

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