The Mischief

by Assia Djebar

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3 reviews
This is Assia Djebar's first novel, written when she was just twenty years old. Perhaps I was judging a book by its cover, but I didn't have high expectations for it, but, on the other hand, this is the first novel of a woman who would win the Neustadt Prize and whose name gets mentioned in the same sentence with "Nobel" from time to time.

Set in Algeria, Nadia tells the story of one young woman's summer escapades. Nadia has European looks and education, she is beautiful, arrogant, cynical, somewhat spoiled, and bored. She is rebelling against convention, and likes to think herself highly individual. She begins to play games and toy with the people around her in her own narcissistic way. But Nadia really doesn't have a solid sense of show more self and through tragedy she will be humbled and changed. I would be tempted to call this a coming-of-age novel, it certainly has many of those qualities, but her transformation feels a bit incomplete at the end. Nadia is a character who is difficult to warm to, although I did support her desire for freedom from convention, and was more sympathetic as her insecurities began to be revealed.

What is remarkable about the book, is that it is nearly apolitical, with barely a mention of Algerian's war for independence going on at that time. However, some literary criticism seems to see in Nadia's quest for self-identity, a reflection of Algeria's own quest for identity. The book is interesting, but mostly, imo, because it is Djebar's first novel. I can see glimpses in this first, rather immature novel, of the writer that Assia Djebar will become.
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One of the books I read earlier this year was Bonjour Tristesse by Francois Sagan and I would advise anyone reading The Mischief or Sagan's novella, to read the other as there are many parallels between the two. Both are narrated by a young beautiful, female bored by the passing of slow, hot summer days and are about their ill-fated attempts to break their lethargy by mischief involving those around them. In both cases, the female protaganists veer from wanton disregard for the feelings of those who are pawns in their summer play, to low-level guilt which do not deter them from their destructive ends.

Nadia cuts an interesting femme fatale, and I was particularly interested in her analysis of her motivations and feelings, which betray show more adolescent indifference about the future and the complexeties which underly the actions of those around her.

It brought to mind my own teenage selfishness and arrogance and I blushed at the truth in these pages.
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½
Zwei Frauen kämpfen um ihren Platz in der traditionnellen Gesellschaft des Maghreb

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26+ Works 1,561 Members
Assia Djebar was born Fatima-Zohra Imalayan in Cherchell, Algeria on June 30, 1936. She read history at the Sorbonne in Paris, and, after teaching at Tunis and Rabat universities, emigrated to France with her husband and children. Her first novel, La Soif (The Mischief), was published in 1957. She wrote more than 15 novels during her lifetime show more including Algerian White, So Vast the Prison, The Tongue's Blood Does Not Run Dry, and The Children of the New World. She was also a playwright and filmmaker. In 2005, she became the fifth woman to be elected to the Académie Française. She received numerous awards for her work including the International Prize of Palmi, the Peace Prize of the Frankfurt Book Fair, the International Critics' Prize at the Venice Biennale for the film La Nouba des Femmes du Mont Chenoua, and the International Literary Neustadt Prize. She died on February 7, 2015 at the age of 78. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Frenaye, Frances (Translator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Mischief
Original title
La soif
Alternate titles
Nadia
Original publication date
1957
People/Characters
Nadia, Jedla
Important places
Algiers, Algeria
Epigraph
One half of me mocks the other ---Joubert
First words
That summer I returned indifferently to the dazzling sunshine of M____ and its usual summer visitors, huddled together in small groups and large families for the purpose of parading, half naked, in the noise and heat.
Quotations
A man wants a woman simply because he feels cold. That is why men—the whole lot of them—are always trying to rub up against something warm.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)All he understood was that I needed the warmth of his body in order to take refuge in life, in all its darkness.
Original language
French
Disambiguation notice
Published in English as Nadia and The Mischief.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
843.91Literature & rhetoricFrench LiteratureFrench fiction1900-20th Century
LCC
PZ4 .D625 .MLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English

Statistics

Members
21
Popularity
1,234,153
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.10)
Languages
Dutch, English, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3
ASINs
2