
Palace Walk
Award History
| Award | Year | Status | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nobel Prize in Literature | 1988 | Winner | “Who, through works rich in nuance - now clear-sightedly realistic, now evocatively ambiguous - has formed an arabian narrative art that applies to all mankind” |
About This Book
Who, through works rich in nuance - now clear-sightedly realistic, now evocatively ambiguous - has formed an arabian narrative art that applies to all mankind
About the Author
Naguib Mahfouz was an Egyptian novelist born in 1911 in Cairo, where he spent his life and worked in civil service until retirement. He is best known for his Cairo Trilogy—Palace Walk, Palace of Desire, and Sugar Street—and other works like Children of the Alley, becoming the first Arabic-language writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1988. He published over 30 novels exploring Egyptian society, existential themes, and social change, though faced controversy and a 1994 stabbing attack by Islamic militants; he died in 2006.
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