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4.0 out of 5 stars
Religion and its Discontents, February 9, 2010
This a terrific novel that deserves to be much better known than it is .It is the only novel I've read dealing with Algierias' terrible civil war .It captures the mind of a person who becomes a religious fanatic, murderer.What grabs you is he is shown to have been ,by western standards, a normal person until a series of misfortunes and mishaps drive him to seek refuge in an awful certainty that makes killing natural and right.It is one of those books that should make you think a little about whether -and I'm putting this mildly- the religous sensibility is a positive force in modern society.The author draws a vibrant , exciting portrait of his country that is both exotic to the westerner and utterly familiar.You know these people quite well.They may speak Arabic but they are all too like your neighbors.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
A true rock 'n roll novel, April 17, 2011
You often see novels promoted as having a rock 'n roll feel or sensibility, but it's not often you read one that has an actual rock 'n roll beat to it. More specifically, a nasty, angry punk rock beat. The Star of Algiers is set in Algeria in 1990-91, just on cusp of the Algerian civil war. The Algiers we see, feel and smell in this novel is, in keeping with the rock 'n roll theme, a mosh pit of a city; dirty, noisy, smelly, overcrowded, and often drunk and/or stoned.
The main character is Moussa, a man in his 30s who shares a three-room apartment with his extended family of fourteen people in a slum district of Algiers. Moussa's ticket out of anonymity and poverty is music; he's a Kabyle singer, which is, it seems, a popular Algerian folk music. But Moussa has aspirations beyond being a successful wedding singer; he constantly reminds himself and others that he's very influenced by Prince and Michael Jackson and wants, in some ill-defined way, to be their Algerian equal.
Moussa's talent is genuine, and he begins to rise in the local music scene against a backdrop of his city and country collapsing into chaos and civil war. Inevitably, as in many rock 'n roll fables,
Moussa descent is fast and furious, and ends with him turning into a militant and bloodthirsty Islamist.
While Moussa is more a symbol than a character, he's an effective guide through the hell of Algiers. On one side is the urban elite: educated, French-speaking, affluent, defining themselves by their Westerness. On the other side are the Islamists, or "beards" as Moussa dismissively calls them. These are men who've embraced religious fanaticism as an unconscious protest against the crushing poverty and corruption of Algeria, and will soon go to war against the one-party government.
What gives this novel is its energy and power, what makes it feel like a throbbing speaker sitting on the side of a stage, is the prose, which is rapid-fire, terse, choppy, acidic. As good as the novel is in depicting a country in free fall, it's even better at showing the wonderful highs and soul-crushing lows of a young man reaching for the stars and falling.
You can read more of my reviews at JettisonCocoon.com
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