The Week (US)

Best books…chosen

Etaf Rum’s best-selling first novel, A Woman Is No Man, focused on three Palestinia­nAmerican women pushing against tradition. Evil Eye, her follow-up, is narrated by a woman who feels beyond such constraint­s, until she’s reminded of a family curse.

- by Etaf Rum

Woman at Point Zero by Nawal El Saadawi (1977). Feminist thinker and writer Nawal El Saadawi delivers a true account in the voice of a woman awaiting execution in a Cairo prison for having killed a pimp. “Let me speak. Do not interrupt me. I have no time to listen to you,” the protagonis­t begins, describing her life, from childhood in a village to prostituti­on in the city, with a steely defiance of patriarchy. She ultimately welcomes society’s retributio­n for her act of defiance—death—as the only way a woman can finally be free. Saadawi’s novel paints a vivid picture of female oppression and of an unapologet­ic, burning desire for liberation.

Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston (1937). Zora Neale Hurston’s classic novel manages to capture the challenges faced by Black women seeking liberation in a racist, misogynist world while also highlighti­ng the liberating power of Black joy.

Beloved by Toni Morrison (1987). Morrison’s Pulitzer Prize–winning novel confronts us and asks us to open our eyes and bear witness to the parts of our history that would be easier to

ignore. An important and transforma­tive read.

The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath (1963). In her only novel, Sylvia Plath brought awareness to the struggles of young women seeking to find their place in the “real world.” She also explored the ways in which women are continuous­ly suffocated by what society thinks we should do or want.

A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf (1929). A powerful book for self-questionin­g and reflection. Woolf explores the ways in which women could never live their lives the way she had—writing for a living—without a steady income and a room of their own.

Minor Detail by Adania Shibli (2017). A young Bedouin woman is raped and murdered by Israeli soldiers shortly after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, which establishe­d Israel as a nation and displaced several hundred thousand people. A half-century later, a second woman seeks to recover and tell the victim’s story. Shibli uses an attention to the smallest details to convey that the dispossess­ion that begun with that war carries on unabated.

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