Midaq Alley could be any small, familiar place like a small town one grew up in, or the neighbourhood of his youth. Here, it is a street in Cairo, Egypt and the story is set sometime during the second world war. Originally written in Arabic, its main charm is that it takes the reader to where he has never been before: a small street, in the heart of the Arab world, at the time when his parents, or maybe grandparents, were just small boys and girls.
Some novels the reader grapples with. This one is an easy read and can be digested even amidst the firecrackers and drunken new year revelries. Not one word where a dictionary is needed and most of the characters are people anyone must already somehow met before: the beautiful, ambitious and materialistic girl, Hamida, who ended up being a prostitute (when she became her pimp's lover he nicknamed her "Titi"--the Tagalog word for penis; and she was given a dance instructor named "Susu"--Tagalog for breasts); the young barber Abbas, who loves her very much and who tragically dies a senseless death because of her; a holy man whom people at the alley consult when they have problems; a married businessman with successful children who is addicted to hashish and sex; another one likes young boys; still another one is constantly being beaten by his wife; the town fool who loves to show off his knowledge of English and actually spells the words, unbidden, for his listeners. One character, however, I had not seen anywwhere else whether in literature or in real life: a beggar who, as a sideline, cripples or maims people who come to him to make them beggars, or better beggars. The process may be likened to, say, going to college to take up a course and prepare oneself for a profession. Not making enough money? One goes to this expert "beggar maker" and he'll know what to do with you: maybe twist your arm a little bit, or nip off an ear, blind an eye, or smash your knees. For free. But the beggar maker gets a commission from the income you'll earn later. From begging.
Naguib Mahfouz, 1988 Nobel Prize winner for literature