Metacritic Books

In the Country of Men
by Hisham Matar

ISBN: 0385340427
The Dial Press, 256 pages, $22.00
Fiction Historical Fiction
Released 01/30/2007

Matar's debut novel, shortlisted for the 2006 Man Booker Prize, describes the effects of the 1969 Libyan September revolution on a 9-year-old boy struggling to understand his family's plight during Moammar Gaddafi's brutal reign.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

89 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Christian Science Monitor Yvonne Zipp
Reviewers like to give debut novels a pat on the head by calling them "promising." If In the Country of Men proves to be merely a promise of what Hisham Matar can do, London's literary lights had better watch their backs.
Outstanding The New York Times Book Review Lorraine Adams
What can a child know about totalitarianism? In Hisham Matar’s exceptional first novel, this question transcends the psychological to yield something rare in contemporary fiction: a sophisticated storybook inhabited by archetypes, told with a 9-year-old’s logic, written with the emphatic and memorable lyricism of verse.
Outstanding Washington Post Ron Charles
Though set in one of the world's most peculiar, most despotic countries, this sad, beautiful novel captures the universal tragedy of children caught in their parents' terrors.
Outstanding The Guardian Kamila Shamsie
Matar movingly charts the ways in which love endures in situations of great repression, but also shows how repression threatens everything, even love, putting relationships under a strain that can be unendurable.
Outstanding Kirkus Reviews
A tender-hearted account, winning in its simplicity, of a childhood infected too soon by the darkness of adults. [1 Nov 2006, p.1095]
Outstanding Library Journal Evelyn Beck
Most memorable in this beautifully written book is the relationship between Suleiman and his young mother...Matar portrays [it] in intimate, realistic, and heartbreaking scenes. [15 Nov 2006, p.58]
Outstanding Publishers Weekly
Matar wrests beauty from searing dread and loss. [30 Oct 2006, p.34]
Outstanding The Observer Oscar Turner
In the Country of Men is a powerful political novel and a tender evocation of universal human conflicts - over identity, forgiveness, love.
Outstanding The Independent Benedicte Page
Matar has written not just a story about a troubled country, but also a beautifully nuanced tale of the complexity of family relationships and the painful vulnerabilities of childhood.
Outstanding Wall Street Journal William Birdthistle
In the Country of Men is a poetic and powerful account of the days of dread that Suleiman and his mother endure....The atmospheric reality of Mr. Matar's portrait speaks to me with particular intensity.
Outstanding New York Review Of Books Pankaj Mishra
Matar balances...delicacy of sentiment with beautifully expressive images....[He] also shows how ordinary human beings under severe pressures are as capable of great cruelty as of great sympathy.
Favorable Boston Globe Eric Weinberger
Everything about In the Country of Men is competent, although only as we learn something about Libya is it gripping.
Favorable Booklist Deborah Donovan
Matar tells a gripping and shocking tale that illuminates the personal facet of a national nightmare. [1 Dec 2006, p.22]
Favorable The Spectator Jonathan Keates
Across a relatively short span, In the Country of Men continuously surprises us with its thematic richness.
Favorable The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Mary-Lou Zeitoun
Matar's [tone is] delicate and often anguished...his [words] consistently grave and poetic.
Favorable The Independent David Dabydeen
What emerges from this moving and graceful novel is the insistence that memories of love will survive the country of men.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Katie Owen
[Suleiman’s] love for [his mother], which comes close at times to hate, is the strongest theme of an exceptional book.
Favorable Entertainment Weekly Jennifer Reese
In limpid prose, Matar captures an ordinary, sometimes craven boy caught up in a political nightmare, and the poignant grown-up nostalgia for the certainties and security of a childhood cut abruptly short.
Favorable Los Angeles Times Susan Salter Reynolds
Matar is a careful, controlled writer. His restraint - the spaces and the light between his words - make reading his work a physical as well as an emotional experience.
Favorable The Nation Ali Sethi
Hisham Matar's powerful debut novel, which was shortlisted for the 2006 Man Booker Prize, tries to pry the lid off [Libya’s] quietly simmering caldron.

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