Audiobook10 hours
Eight Months on Ghazzah Street
Written by Hilary Mantel
Narrated by Sandra Duncan
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
When Frances Shore joins her engineer husband in Jeddah she is warned not to ask questions. But bored, she begins to speculate about her neighbours and the empty flat above her. At first she believes the flat is being used as a lover's tryst - then she suspects something more sinister.
Author
Hilary Mantel
Hilary Mantel is the author of seventeen books, including A Place of Greater Safety, Beyond Black, the memoir Giving Up the Ghost and the short story collection The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher. Her latest novel, The Mirror & the Light, won the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, while Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies were both awarded the Booker Prize.
More audiobooks from Hilary Mantel
Mantel Pieces: Royal Bodies and Other Writing from the London Review of Books Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Learning to Talk: Stories Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Eight Months on Ghazzah Street
Rating: 3.6962617242990654 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
107 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5When Hilary Mantel passed away earlier this year, I wanted to make an effort to read her novels that were still on my shelf. [Eight Months on Ghazzah Street] looked interesting so I picked it up. Frances and her husband, Andrew, move to Saudi Arabia in the 1980s. They know it's going to be a culture shock, especially for Frances considering how women are restricted there, but they'll be making a considerable amount of money, so it's deemed worth it. Also, they've lived several places in Africa and are used to adapting to different cultures. They move into an apartment building and Frances immediately realizes this is going to be harder than she thought. Andrew leaves for work every day and she is trapped inside, both because women can't move about freely and because of the heat. She can't work or even go out to shop or sight see. For independent, intelligent Frances, this is tough. After a month or so she begins to develop relationships with the other women in her building. As she gets to know them, she also gets to know some of the other expats that Andrew works with. And a mystery about the empty apartment above her begins to develop. Though it's supposedly empty, there is noise up there and obviously people spending time in the apartment. And then things start getting dangerous. It's no longer just the foreign culture that is upsetting Frances, it's clear that there are nefarious activities going on as well. Hilary Mantel is masterful at layering a book with interesting plot and characters with deeper themes and cultural observations. I really enjoyed this and definitely recommend it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Slow, stifling, claustrophobic, depressing... but that's the idea. Mantel has made use of the years she spent in Saudia Arabia (and how she managed years, when eight months feels like a life sentence) to inform this novel of thirty-ish professional Frances, who joins her construction engineer husband for a temporary, extremely well-paid (or so they are told) gig in Jeddah. Trapped in company-issued housing with every window facing a blank wall, Frances cannot get a job, go out without her husband, or even speak to her Muslim neighbors in their apartment building unless they initiate it. There is an allegedly empty flat in the building, and rumors are it is a trysting place for some Saudi official to meet his mistress (in a nation where adultery is a bloodily capital offense). But is that in fact what's going on there?The unfortunate jacket copy on this edition bills this novel as horror / suspense / tense / forboding / chilling, a Saudi "Turn of the Screw." It isn't. Frances is miserable, lonely, and depressed. She broods on incidents and rumors. There are dreadful dinner parties with her husband's colleagues, swilling down home brewed wine. The company starts to have trouble being paid. You can't leave without permission. Buildings and streets are thrown up and torn down so fast that maps are useless and going anywhere is a nightmare of traffic and disorientation. Then a mysterious crate appears on the balcony of the unoccupied flat. Government flunkies sidle in and out, obscene amounts of money change hands, are laundered. Is the woman across the hall the secret mistress? What's up with that crate? A man with a rifle is stationed on the corner. And all the time I'm reading this novel, published in 1988, I'm thinking about Jamal Khashoggi.I will refrain from further spoilers - partly because the ending is murky. But it never quite crescendoes into a revelation or epiphany or resolution. Mantel is still finding her feet, I think, in this novel. She certainly evokes Frances's trapped and miserable daily life - but it makes for a lot of pages of pretty dreary and somewhat repetitive reading. Jeddah sounds like a truly horrible place to exist. But dialog is often stilted, contrived, and Frances's limited conversations with her Muslim neighbor serve more as info-dumps than exposition of the culture and people of it. She does manage to convey some digs at the failings of the British and American expats who collude in this shady world of lies, greed, threats, deceit, and violence all while feeling rather smug and superior. But what she does do - and has gone on to do with brilliance - is portray the evils engineered and inflicted by governments, by belief systems, by corporations, by systems, on individuals.And I still keep thinking about Jamal Khashoggi.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Thoroughly enjoyed this book...the setting, the characters, the atmosphere, the tension...all of which would be a challenge for any marriage. Published over 25 years ago, I would bet things have not changed much in the Saudi culture in all that time. Author Hiliary Mantel did spend some time in the Middle East, so I am sure she did draw on her experience there to create this story of intrigue and suspense.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Masterfully blending gothic horror tropes with a careful study of the intellectual dislocation and resulting eccentric behavior of Westerners working in Saudi Arabia, Hilary Mantel's Eight Months on Ghazzah Street is a riveting and remarkable novel. Mantel has the great novelist's eye for telling detail, and she describes the many strange landscapes and uncertain moments confronting her protagonist in such well-honed, immediate language that the character's confusion and sense of disorder are carried over to the reader. A stylistic triumph.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Bizarro-World Islamofascism and conspicuous consumption all up in your teeth in the Saudi Arabia of the 1980s, filtered through expat alienation and with a creepy gothic mystery thrown in for no reason except to be awesome.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Disappointing. The author does a good job of creating an oppressive atmosphere but I didn't feel like there was much else to back it up. VERY slow and pretty darned boring, which partially I think was intentional (to make you feel like the main character) but it is still slow and boring. The resolution of the "mystery" is recounted in the same tone and seems like it could almost go unnoticed. A weak end for something that is not that fun to read and at the same time mildly anxiety provoking.