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Book Cover for: A Bed for the King's Daughter, Shahla Ujayli

A Bed for the King's Daughter

Shahla Ujayli

A groundbreaking collection of experimental short fiction by award-winning Syrian author and Booker International Prize for Arabic Fiction nominee Shahla Ujayli, A Bed for the King's Daughter uses surrealism and irony to examine such themes as women's agency, the decline of collective life and imagination under modernity, and the effects of social and political corruption on daily life. In "The Memoir of Cinderella's Shoes," Cinderella uses her famous glass slipper as a weapon in order to take justice into her own hands. In "Tell Me About Surrealism," an art history professor's writing assignment reveals the slipperiness of storytelling, and in "Merry Christmas," the realities of apartheid interfere with one family's celebration. Through twenty-two short stories, Ujayli animates--with brevity and inventiveness--themes relevant to both the particularities of life in the Arab world and life outside it.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Ctr for Middle Eastern Studies Ut-Austin
  • Publish Date: Jan 19th, 2021
  • Pages: 72
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.50in - 5.50in - 0.18in - 0.23lb
  • EAN: 9781477322284
  • Categories: Short Stories (single author)

About the Author

Ujayli, Shahla: - Shahla Ujayli is the author of four novels: The Cat's Eye (2006), which won the Jordan State Award for Literature 2009; Persian Carpet (2012); A Sky Close to Our House (2015), which was IPAF-shortlisted in 2016; and Summer with the Enemy (2018), which was IPAF-shortlisted in 2019. She has also published one other short collection in Arabic, The Latticed Window (2005). The Arabic edition of A Bed for the King's Daughter (2016) won the 2017 Al-Multaqa Prize for the Arabic Short Story awarded by the American University in Kuwait.

Praise for this book

Don't let the relatively brief length of this collection fool you--these stories offer readers a fascinating cross-section of styles, tones, and themes. Some grapple with the political and social struggles of the present day, while others address more timeless themes. The end result is a memorable showcase for Ujayli's skills as a writer.-- "Words Without Borders" (2/26/2021 12:00:00 AM)
How do you sharply round out a story that is headed for a cliff? How do you make the sudden feel inevitable, circumventable, then over, as if all at once? Repeatedly, Ujayli manages, if not to square the circle, then to circle the square and so every square within it.-- "Chicago Review of Books" (1/21/2021 12:00:00 AM)