This is the first Parker Bilal book that I have read from the series. It is a dark, intelligent, gritty and edgy story from an accomplished writer. Makana, the PI, is an ex-police officer from Somalia, with a haunting and traumatic backstory of family loss and exile. He is a strong, engaging, and astute character who lives and walks the mean streets of Cairo. He is aided by a network of colourful people such as Marwan, who works for the military, Sami and Rania at the makeshift media agency, the Zafrani gangster brothers and others.
Makana is hired by Kasabian, a well known art dealer, to find Samari, an Iraqi Colonel, who has a dubiously acquired painting which an American buyer is keen on. It turns out nothing and no-one is as they seem. Kasabian ends up being murdered in a manner that implicates Samari. Samari is wanted by the US who are offering a huge reward for his capture. Makana continues on the trail and comes across Frank Cassidy who is searching for the killer of his son in the Iraq war. The world of private contractors (mercenaries) is uncovered plus links to the Gulf War and the US invasion of Iraq. The everyday casual brutality meted out by state intelligence agents, the military, politicians and gangsters is laid bare. The corruption, deceit, hypocrisy and betrayal of politicians is exposed as the norm, as is their disregard of the people. There is political interference and obstacles placed in Makana’s path. There is a shoot out on Cairo’s streets and the finale is a twisted and bloody affair.
Makana emerges as a man who is adept in handling the unsettling and capricious political, military and criminal factions. He understands that accepting money and patronage will place him in an untenable moral position. He is, as far as is possible, his own man. Bilal has written a fast paced narrative with the inherent tensions of life in Cairo. It is a well plotted novel with believable characters. What lifts the book above the crime genre is the discerning insights and descriptions it offers of Egypt, recent Middle Eastern history and the effects of the US led invasions. It brings to the mainstream audience the lives of diverse, ordinary characters battling to survive the harsh social, political and economic times in Egypt and an unstable Middle East. I loved the book and plan to read the rest of the series. Many thanks to Bloomsbury for a copy of the book via netgalley.