Alexandria City of memory Michael Hagg
Material type:
TextLanguage: Arabic Producer: Cairo merican University in Cairo Press 2004Edition: 1 stDescription: 368 pages illustrations 23 سمContent type: - نص
- بدون وسيط
- كتاب
- 9774243870
- 962.11 H A 21
| Cover image | Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Vol info | URL | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | Item hold queue priority | Course reserves | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Books | مكتبة مصر الرئيسية - Misr Main Library Adult - كبار | 29 - Adult History and Geography - تاريخ وجغرافيا كبار | 962.11 H.A, 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 800020160 |
In the decades before Nasser's seizure of power and the Suez crisis, Alexandria was a magnet for the wealthy, the gifted, and the glamorous from around the world. The whole city looked seaward, its port one of the busiest in the Mediterranean, its spirit ecumenical, its life luxuriant and sensual. Alexandria was barely an Egyptian city, and the Egyptians who live there now inhabit the gently crumbling remains of a foreign world, whose palatial villas, Venetian apartments, art-nouveau cafes, Moorish hotels, and cinemas conceived in thirties deco, are haunted by a departed cast. "I lived a great, extravagant, and colorful life in wartime Alexandria," recalled Lawrence Durrell, whose Alexandria Quartet is one of the greatest protraits of a city in modern literature. Michael Haag, who has lived in Alexandria, and has known Durrell and others who lived there during its cosmopolitan heyday, has retraced their footsteps to present an absorbing account of the places and the people of this most remarkable of cities
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