Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Live from Cairo
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
7 posts | 5 read | 16 to read
From a hugely talented, award-winning young author, a brilliant, lively debut novel about an impulsive American attorney, a methodical Egyptian translator, and a disillusioned Iraqi-American resettlement officer trying to protect a refugee who finds herself trapped in Cairo during the turbulent aftermath of the January 25 revolution. Cairo, 2011. President Mubarak has just been ousted from power. The oldest city in the world is reeling from political revolution, its consequent hopes and fears, its violence, triumphs, and defeats. But for the people actually living there, daily life has not slowed down but become wilder, more dangerous, and, occasionally, freeing. Live from Cairo is the exuberant, dazzling story of these people: Dalia, a strong-willed Iraqi refugee who finds herself trapped in Egypt after her petition to resettle in America with her husband is denied. Charlie, her foolhardy attorney, whose frustration with the legal bureaucracy and complicated feelings for Dalia have led him to forge a not entirely legal plan to get her out. Aos, Charlies fastidious translator and only friend, who spends his days trying to help people through the system and his nights in Tahrir Square protesting against it. And Hana, a young and disenchanted Iraqi-American resettlement officer; she is the worker assigned to Dalias case, deciding whether to treat her plight as merely one more piece of paperwork, or as a full-blooded human crisis. As these individuals come together, a plot is formed to help Dalia. But soon laws are broken, friendships and marriages are tested, and lives are riskedall in an effort to protect one person from the dangerous sweep of an unjust world. A vibrant portrait of a city in all its teeming chaos and glory, Live from Cairo is an exhilarating, electrifying debut, and a stunning testament to the unconquerable desire of people to rise above tragedy to seek love, friendship, humor, and joy.
LibraryThing
blurb
mrozzz
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image

As seen in @bookculture -- any thoughts on this one?
I'm TRYING to be more conservative in my hauls from both the bookstore and the library and would love to hear thoughts from you Littens.
I like the premise! (Might not make it through the week without buying!) 😏

46 likes1 stack add
review
lauralovesbooks1
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image
Pickpick

Exceptionally good debut novel about a group of people working in various ways to help refugees in Egypt find new homes in the West -- and who sometimes make dangerous and flawed decisions (depending on your point of view) These characters are multidimensional and every one feels like a real person with motivations and back story completely their own. Complex, but not complicated -- I enjoyed and appreciated this read.

charissharpe This looks great, love the cover, stacked. 7y
22 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
MrBook
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image

#TBRtemptation post 2! #PhillyMeetUp edition! Just released. Cairo, 2011. Dalia, a strong-willed Iraqi refugee is trapped in Egypt when her petition to join her husband in America is denied. Her attorney, Charlie, hatches a not-so legal plan. Aos is their translator by day and a Tahrir Square protestor at night. Hana is the disenchanted Iraqi-American resettlement officer assigned to Dalia's case. Will they all unify? #blameLitsy #blameMrBook 😎

lauralovesbooks1 This one is pretty high on my TBR stack -- hoping to get to it this weekend or next. 7y
68 likes2 stack adds1 comment
review
Marchpane
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image
Pickpick

Live from Cairo is about grey areas: morality conflicts with the law; refugees live in limbo while their right to resettle is assessed; locals' love of homeland abuts hatred for the regime.

Egypt‘s 2011 revolution is the backdrop & the constant threat of brutality informs everything that happens. The sense of urgency does not let up.

Some characters weren't fully realised and much is unresolved at the end, but it's a gripping, affecting read.

102 likes5 stack adds
review
Michellesibs
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image
Mehso-so

This book appealed to me as I lived in Egypt from 2008 to 2015 however it wasn't what I was expecting at all. It could have been set anywhere, cairo didn't feel like cairo to me in the book. I couldn't relate to the characters, I felt the author explained crumbs on a seat belt better than he pulled me into the character lives. Perhaps my disappointment is because I was there in this time and for me the book didn't do it justice.

review
Adventures-of-a-French-Reader
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image
Pickpick

Very good book, very well written. It's a book about immigration. We discover the bureaucracy, the difficulties faced by refugees.

14 likes1 stack add
blurb
Adventures-of-a-French-Reader
Live from Cairo: A Novel | Ian Bassingthwaighte
post image

Today I received this advanced reading copy, and this wonderful totebag from Scribner! I won them on Instagram ;) I just LOVE #bookmail