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Frankenstein in Baghdad (2013)

by Ahmed Saadawi

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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7943327,997 (3.57)143
After he constructs a corpse from body parts found on the street, Hadi wants the government to prepare a proper burial, but when the corpse goes missing, a series of strange murders occur and Hadi realizes he has created a monster.
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» See also 143 mentions

English (32)  French (1)  All languages (33)
Showing 1-5 of 32 (next | show all)
Saadawi conjures a monster in this macabre comedy that requires human flesh to thrive - first from the underbelly of society, then from anybody in its path.
Hadi, a trash merchant, gathers human body parts and puts them together to construct a corpse in the desolate streets of US-occupied Baghdad. His stated objective is for the government to acknowledge the pieces as humans and provide them with proper burial. When the corpse goes missing, a wave of weird murders sweeps the city, and stories of a horrifying-looking criminal who, despite being shot, cannot be killed flood in.
Despite the dark elements to this concept, Saadawi handles with a light touch. He creates some fantastic characters and captures with white-knuckle horror and black humour the surreal reality of a city at war.

I included this excellent book in my Best Middle Eastern Books to read.
https://quizlit.org/10-best-middle-eastern-books ( )
  Quizlitbooks | Apr 20, 2024 |
Interesting if never quite compelling, Frankenstein in Baghdad is a loose riff on the eponymous Gothic novel that unfolds in contemporary Baghdad. Here, Hadi the Junk Dealer starts to collect the parts of human bodies which litter the city, trying to create a whole body that can be properly laid to rest. But by chance, the soul of a young man killed in a bomb attack ends up animating the corpse—and the bulletproof Whatsitsname is soon bound on revenge. Ahmed Saadawai's novel has flashes of dark satirical humour, but mostly I found this a sombre read. The large cast of POV characters provides many different perspectives on what's happening—are the events we're reading about "actually" happening or are they a hallucination? a hoax?—but while I found some of them engaging, many of them were difficult to keep track of and generally fairly passive/reactive to what's going on around them. Which may be an understandable reaction to life in the kind of circumstances described here! But it made for a less propulsive read. ( )
  siriaeve | Mar 7, 2024 |
Unfortunately this book wasn't really for me. The detached third-person omniscient writing style drifts between numerous characters, none of whom are particularly appealing. All the characters mostly just sort of have things happen to them, and feel vaguely dissatisfied about it. Time also sort of drifts around, with events often being told out of order for no particular reason. And the main plot sort of wanders off, never to return to that POV again. ( )
  lavaturtle | Dec 28, 2023 |
This should be a 3.75, but I don't want to give it a 3.5. So, it's different, it's interesting, but it's not compelling. I wavers between dream-like, parable and child-like, and the end, well is there an end? It just finishes really, with no real ending. ( )
  malcrf | Aug 24, 2023 |
Saadawi's layering of the beginning makes for a slow dive into the traumatized city of Baghdad and its struggling inhabitants, but in a fashion that lures the reader deeper and deeper into what feels like the set-up for a realistic horror novel. When things go the way of Frankenstein, turning sideways into a puzzle of characters, bodies, and victimhood, the picture becomes both clearer and more labyrinthine. Paying homage to classics such as Frankenstein and Dracula also add further layers for the readers who've read the classics, and while this may be a slow horror read in comparison to other contemporary horror novels, I'm glad to have made my way through it. ( )
  whitewavedarling | May 19, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 32 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (21 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Ahmed Saadawiprimary authorall editionscalculated
Ramirez, JasonCover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Teresi, BarbaraTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Wright, JonathanTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
Yet I ask you not to spare me: listen to me; and then, if you can, and if you will, destroy the work of your hands.
-Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
The king ordered that the saint be placed in the olive press until his flesh was torn to pieces and he died. They then threw him out of the city, but the Lord Jesus gathered the pieces together and brought him back to life, and he went back into the city.
-The Story of St. George, the Great Martyr
You who are listening to these recordings now, if you don't have the courage to help me with my noble mission, then at least try not to stand in my way.
-The Whatitsname
Dedication
First words
With regard to the activities of the Tracking and Pursuit Department, which is partially affiliated to the civil administration of the international coalition forces in Iraq, the special committee of inquiry set up under my chairmanship, with representatives of the Iraqi security and intelligence agencies and observers from US military intelligence, has come to the following conclusions:
Quotations
Fear of the Wahtsitsname continued to spread.  In Sadr City they spoke of him as a Wahhabi, in Adamiya as a Shiite extremist.  The Iraqi government described his as an agent of foreign powers, while the spokesman for the U.S. State Department said he was an ingenious man whose aim was to undermine the American project in Iraq.

But what project might that be?  As far as Brigadier Majid was concerned, the monster was their project.  It was the Americans who were behind this monster.  (p. 268)
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After he constructs a corpse from body parts found on the street, Hadi wants the government to prepare a proper burial, but when the corpse goes missing, a series of strange murders occur and Hadi realizes he has created a monster.

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