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Ezzedine C. Fishere

3.4/5 ( ratings)
Fishere is an Egyptian novelist, former diplomat and academic.

He published many novels in Arabic, mostly depicting Egyptian social and political decay. Two of which were nominated for the Arabic Booker Prize and another two turned into a Pan-Arab TV series. His “Embrace at Brooklyn Bridge”, a novel on identity construction and transformation, was published in English and Italian . The Egyptian Assassin was published in English . All that nonsense was published in French in 2021 .

Fishere has a diplomatic experience both with Egyptian Foreign Service and the United Nations missions in the Middle East and East Africa. He left diplomacy in 2007 to focus on his writing. He taught at the Political Science department of the American University in Cairo between 2008 and 2016. When the Tahrir Uprising began in 2011, he, got engaged in Egyptian politics and worked with liberal pro-democracy groups and candidates. In 2016 he moved to the United States to teach at Dartmouth College, where he is currently.

Fishere also writes political commentary, and has been a contributing columnist at the Washington Post since 2020.

See عزالدين شكري فشير

Ezzedine C. Fishere

3.4/5 ( ratings)
Fishere is an Egyptian novelist, former diplomat and academic.

He published many novels in Arabic, mostly depicting Egyptian social and political decay. Two of which were nominated for the Arabic Booker Prize and another two turned into a Pan-Arab TV series. His “Embrace at Brooklyn Bridge”, a novel on identity construction and transformation, was published in English and Italian . The Egyptian Assassin was published in English . All that nonsense was published in French in 2021 .

Fishere has a diplomatic experience both with Egyptian Foreign Service and the United Nations missions in the Middle East and East Africa. He left diplomacy in 2007 to focus on his writing. He taught at the Political Science department of the American University in Cairo between 2008 and 2016. When the Tahrir Uprising began in 2011, he, got engaged in Egyptian politics and worked with liberal pro-democracy groups and candidates. In 2016 he moved to the United States to teach at Dartmouth College, where he is currently.

Fishere also writes political commentary, and has been a contributing columnist at the Washington Post since 2020.

See عزالدين شكري فشير

Books from Ezzedine C. Fishere

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