Muhammed Afifi, Little Songs in the
Shade of Tamaara,
read it at Google Books
Paradise, for the skeptic Mohammed
Afifi, was just four steps down from his porch into a sunny garden.
There he would sit, morning and evening, in the shadow of Tamaara,
his beloved tamarhinna tree, soaking up the sights, sounds, and
smells of his precious corner of the natural world. From an old
yellow straw chair, Afifi would train his perceptive gaze on that
garden in all its detail. Flora and fauna blessed him with honorary
membership in their enchanted realm. Only the rare downpours of
winter and the dust storms of spring could banish him indoors. Yet,
whether inspired at the side of the heater, purring black cat on his
lap, or next to the pansy bed, with ecstatic flocks of bee-eaters
overhead, Afifi’s intimate, whimsical musings radiate a profound
and unique sense of place.
Lisa J. White’s nuanced translation
of Taramiim fii Dhill Taraara captures Afifi’s impish, ironic sense
of humor and his unsparing honesty. She handles Afifi’s parting
gift to the world with great care and honor. Mohammed Afifi died in
1981, in winter, just after completing this fictionalized memoir.
Majestic and melancholy, mysterious and magical—the essence of his
world, Afifi’s extraordinary garden, is here revealed to the
English-speaking world.
dreamy contemplations of the creatures inhabiting his garden (the dog, a frog, his wife, etc.) by an old man sitting under a tree; cult classic in the making. - Humphrey Davies
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