Idris is a goatherd living in a remote oasis village in the Sahara. One day a blonde woman leaps from a Land Rover and takes his photograph, promising to send him a copy when it is printed in Paris. It's non-appearance awakens a wanderlust in Idris and he travels to the coast and thence to Marseilles and finally Paris.
The narrative is punctuated by folk stories, from the tale of Khair-ed-Din, known as Barbarossa, to the legend of the portrait of the Blonde Queen, and the story of a folk singer,
Photos and photography are a running theme, usually presaging disaster. Immediately after Idris has had his photo taken, his best friend is killed in an accident. The only photo in the oasis is that of his Uncle and two friends from the army ... taken the night before they were killed. Old Lala wants to adopt Idris because he resembles a photograph of her son, who died. Idris has a photo taken for his passport ... but it is of another man, with a beard. In Paris he goes to what he thinks is a bookshop and sees lots of porno magazines with images of naked men and women. When he finds the woman who took his photo there is a scene in a bar and he is arrested ... having his mugshot taken. A collector of (male child) shop mannequins takes photographs of the parties he holds with them.
If it isn't photos, it is the making of images: Khair-ed-Din's portrait painter says "I am a painter of the depths, and the depths of a human being are transparent on his face once the agitation of day-to-day life ceases." (p 36); Idris sees his first TV on the ferry to Marseilles: it shows adverts and the news of a riot in Paris; Idris has a job as a street-sweeper and is recruited by a film crew on lcation to play the part of a street sweeper; the director later takes him to his flat and shows him an album of photographs; Another job he gets is to have a plaster cast made of his body to be turned into display mannequins; Idris learns calligraphy
And there is the theme of the golden droplet, a jewel found by Idris before he leaves the oasis and lost by him when he loses his virginity to a whore in Marseilles at the midpoint of the book.
A short little book, delightfully written and full of incident. Idris ia a great Everyman. There are some very strange and very funny moments. Above all, it is thoughtful and challenges the reader to think. I'm not sure I understand it fully; I will probably need three or four more reads to get much from it. But it is beautifully constructed and works even if only on the level of a good story, well told.