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Authors: Nuruddin Farah

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is set in a city that is at once shockingly foreign and hauntingly familiar: Mogadiscio, the capital of Somalia, just weeks after the U.S. troops have pulled out, leaving a decimated, starving city ruled by thuggish clan warlords and patrolled by qaat-chewing gangs who shoot civilians simply to relieve their adolescent boredom. This is the city so disturbingly captured by CNN cameras and in
Black Hawk Down
, but from a startlingly different—and surprising—point-of-view.
Jeebleh is returning to Mogadiscio from New York for the first time in twenty years. Equipped with a clear-minded Americanized perspective and ready to attend to business, this journey is not a nostalgia trip for him—Jeebleh's last residence here was a jail cell. And who could feel nostalgic for a city like this?
Jeebleh is returning to visit his mother's grave and to settle her outstanding accounts—but more urgently, the youngest member of his oldest friend's family has been abducted. Though they have not seen each other in two decades, Jeebleh knows from their childhood that his friend—a virtual brother who remained in Somalia when Jeebleh left—will need Jeebleh to step in. Jeebleh is determined to cut through the swirling, clan-based violence and corruption to rescue the little girl—and, perhaps, a piece of his own identity. Jeebleh's adventure pulls him (and us) into a whirlwind tour of a city where nothing—family or friendship, loyalty or gratitude, betrayal or resentment, tradition or modernity—is simple.
Gripping, provocative, and revelatory,
Links
is the finest work yet from Farah, a novel that will both secure his place in the international literary firmament and stand as a classic of modern world literature.
About Nuruddin Farah
Widely recognized as not just “one of the finest contemporary African writers” (Salman Rushdie) but as “one of the most sophisticated voices in modern fiction” (
The New York Review of Books
), Nuruddin Farah is the author of eight novels. His fiction has been translated into more than a dozen languages and won numerous awards, including the 1998 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, “widely regarded as the most prestigious international literary award after the Nobel” (
The New York Times
).
Born in Somalia, Farah was persona non grata in his native country for over twenty years, able to visit Mogadiscio for the first time in the late 1990s. He currently lives in Cape Town, South Africa.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1. After nearly being run over by a cab in New York City, Jeebleh travels to Mogadiscio to “disorient death” (p. 5). What does he mean by this?
 
2. Though Jeebleh was born and raised in Mogadiscio, much has changed in the twenty years since he moved to America. Do others view Jeebleh as a Somalian or as an American? How does Jeebleh view himself? What sort of conflicts does Jeebleh's twenty year absence present?
 
3. Discuss Jeebleh's refusal to give his clan family money for a new battlewagon and his intervention when he sees the child beating the dog. Do you expect this from Jeebleh given his personality and actions up to this point? What do you think causes him to do this?
4. Discuss Jeebleh's relationship with his mother. Specifically, why do you think she never moved to America? How are Jeebleh's actions toward her after her death different from the way he treated her while she was still alive? How are views on the family different between Somalians and Americans?
 
5. The description given of Hagarr, Bile and Caloosha's mother, on pages 172 and 173 paints the picture of a strong, educated, independent woman. How are other women in the novel depicted? How are their relationships with men depicted?
 
6. After being injected by the bodyguard in the cemetery, Jeebleh undergoes personal changes. Discuss the nature of his transformation. Would you describe him as more courageous? How does this transformation help him?
 
7. Dreams and superstitions have a significant impact on the actions taken by Jeebleh and his friends. In particular, there are many superstitious views about Raasta who is viewed as an extraordinary child. What does Raasta offer her family and the people of Mogadiscio that warrants the admiration that she receives?
 
8. What do you think of Jeebleh's ultimate decision concerning Caloosha? What gives him the strength to make this decision? What do you think the long-term impact will be for the people surrounding Caloosha?
 
9. Why do you think Jeebleh leaves Mogadiscio without saying good-bye to his friends?
 
10. What other direction could Jeebleh take at the end of the novel when he decides to book himself “on a homebound flight and, not wanting to tempt fate, get to New York before impulse propelled him in another direction”?
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FOR MORE NURUDDIN FARAH, LOOK FOR THE
“Nuruddin Farah, the most important African novelist to emerge in the last twenty-five years, is also one of the most sophisticated voices in modern fiction.”
—The New York Review of Books
Links
Before he left for a twenty-year exile in America, Jeebleh's last residence in Mogadiscio had been a jail cell. When he finally returns, it is to a decimated city that U.S. troops have recently abandoned, ruled by clan warlords and patrolled by gangs who shoot civilians to relieve their adolescent boredom. Once back home, Jeebleh finds himself in the midst of swirling violence and corruption as he attempts to rescue a little girl and reunite the family of his oldest friend. Gripping, provocative, and revelatory,
Links
is the finest work yet from Farah, a novel that stands as a classic of modern world literature.
ISBN 0-14-303484-7
Secrets
 
“Hypnotic . . .
Secrets
is a shape shifter—murder mystery, family saga, magical realist thriller.”—
Newsday
Set against the backdrop of Somalia's devastating civil war,
Secrets
is a stunning revelatory novel. The city of Mogadiscio is in crisis when the protagonist, Kalaman, receives an unexpected houseguest, his childhood crush returned from America. Sensual and demanding, Sholoongo announces her intention to have his child, pulling Kalaman back into a past full of doubts and secrets to uncover the startling truth of his own conception.
ISBN 0-14-028045-6
 
Gifts
“Farah weaves together myth, dream, and realism to create literature that is truly world-class.”—
Los Angeles Times Book Review
The second in Farah's trilogy,
Gifts
tells the story of Duniya, a single mother working at the troubled hospital in Mogadiscio. In luxuriant prose, Farah weaves events into a tapestry of dreams, memories, family lore, folktales, and journalistic accounts. Both personal and political,
Gifts
explores the values, challenges, and sufferings of one family—and an entire people.
ISBN 0-14-029642-5
 
Maps
“Startling . . . passionate. Farah's masterpiece.”—Suzanne Ruta,
The New York Times Book Review
A strikingly lyrical novel,
Maps
is the story of Askar, an orphan whose mother died in childbirth and whose father was killed in the bloody war dividing Somalia and Ethiopia before he was born. As a precocious adolescent, he leaves for Mogadiscio in search of a perspective on both his country and himself, and at the hub of violence, Askar throws himself into radical political activity that continually challenges the murky boundaries of his own being, just as “revolution” redefines Somalia's own borders.
ISBN 0-14-029643-3

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