The National - News

Epic novel that charts years of change in Oman captures French literary prize

▶ Jokha Alharthi wrote book while juggling parenthood with literature studies, she tells Colin Randall

-

AI hope my prize helps to open a door to the rich and deep qualities of Arab literature

JOKHA ALHARTHI

Author

n Omani author’s novel that traces the modern history and rise to prosperity of her country through the lives of two families has won a French literary award.

The French translatio­n of Celestial Bodies, published this year, has won Jokha Alharthi the 2021 prize for Arab literature, awarded by the Institute of the Arab World in Paris.

Alharthi began writing the novel when she was a young mother caring for her baby daughter while pursuing a doctorate far from home at the University of Edinburgh.

“I came to love Edinburgh,” said Alharthi, who lectures in classical Arab literature at Sultan Qaboos University in Muscat.

“But when I arrived, it was freezing cold and I was in a new environmen­t without friends and facing a new language. Writing each evening in Arabic, after working in English all day, gave me balance and brought the warmth of Oman back into my life.”

Celestial Bodies previously became the first novel originally in Arabic to win the Man Booker Internatio­nal Prize in 2019. It also won a “best Omani novel” award in her own country after the original Arabic version was published in 2010.

In their citation, the Paris judging panel described Celestial Bodies as “a captivatin­g and poetic novel that allows us to discover an Omani society in full transforma­tion, as well as the living conditions and aspiration­s of its population”.

“Although anchored in Omani reality, this book speaks for all mankind and addresses the universal,” the judges said.

As she collected the €10,000 ($11,340) in Paris, Ms Alharthi reflected on the book’s origins and its success.

“I wanted to trace the developmen­t of my country, from the 19th century to the millennium, through the lives of four generation­s of the families,” she told The National. “We see through the complex relationsh­ips how old values came to be questioned and understand how Omani people reacted to and embraced rapidly changing lives after the discovery of oil.”

Her daughter was only nine months old when Ms Alharthi and her husband, a civil engineer, moved to Scotland to enable her to further her Arab literature studies.

Celestial Bodies was her second novel. She has since written two more, including Bitter Orange Tree, English translatio­ns of which are to be published in the US and UK in May next year. She has also written three children’s books, three collection­s of short stories and three academic works.

“I write because I need to write,” she said. “An Arab scholar once said some books are like some people: just lucky. Maybe Celestial Bodies is my lucky book.”

The family’s expansion – she now has three children, aged 16, 13 and 3 – and her full-time academic job mean there is no discipline­d structure to her writing.

“I cannot say ‘right, I will write from 8am to 5pm’,” she said. “That approach works for other writers but I am a mum and I work. I have to do my duties as a mother as well.

“Also, I don’t force myself.

If I find myself running out of ideas or not really feeling for my characters, I am quite happy to stop writing, maybe for two or three months.”

Ms Alharthi, who has become accustomed to seeing her books on sale as she passes through airports, said she was proud and delighted that her work was being translated into European languages other than English.

Celestial Bodies has appeared in 17 languages, with four more in the pipeline.

“In France, for example, the translatio­n of books from Oman or the Gulf in general has not been a particular­ly big thing,” she said. “I hope my prize helps to open a door to the rich and deep qualities of Arab literature.”

 ?? Jokha Alharthi ?? Omani author Jokha Alharthi with her certificat­e from the Institute of the Arab World for ‘Celestial Bodies’
Jokha Alharthi Omani author Jokha Alharthi with her certificat­e from the Institute of the Arab World for ‘Celestial Bodies’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates