Mekhti a novel ISBN 978-0930773-717 |
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Mekhti is a novel of obsession. And it is an
emotional coming-of-age story. A teenage girl is seduced by a man twenty years older
than she. What does he mean to her? What does she mean to him? The story
told by the unnamed girl, the force of this book is carried by her emotions. It
begins, in fact, with loss--of family, of identity. And while the girl is the one
seduced, Mekhti, her lover, has meaning for her beyond his sexuality. Their
relationship, the author writes, "was like a cancer that grew and grew, invading
every part of our lives and squeezing until nothing else was left. Simple
relationships, like friend or boyfriend, are easy, you can replace them. But who
could we ever find to reach into as many places in each other's lives?"
Reminiscent of Kathryn Harrison's The Kiss, Mekhti
is a story of a girl trying to fill an emptiness in her life, and of how that trying
changes her.
What the Critics are Saying |
"Mesmerizing, dreamlike prose distinguishes this
quirky twist on Lolita, in which a 15-year-old girl finds herself deeply
obsessed with a man 20 years her senior. The narrator, who remains unnamed, is
first attracted to Mekhti, a Uzbek immigrant, because he speaks the same
language as her absent father. Born in Tehran, the narrator moved to the United
States when she was very young and has spent much of her life mourning what she
lost: her culture, her language, her father. Her successfully remarried American
mother barely notices when her daughter, previously a top student, starts
skipping school and spending most of her days and nights at Mekhti's apartment.
Thus begins a twisted relationship that develops over the course of several
months while Mekhti's wife is in New York with relatives, waiting to give birth
to her second child. The narrator submits to Mekhti's sexual advances, as well
as to his forays into darker forms of sexual manipulation, though her fierce
love for him is childlike and instinctive. Her blank, unflinching recitation of
events loops its way forward, revisiting pivotal points in the relationship and
neatly conveying the passivity to which she succumbs. Though the ease with which
she detaches herself from her previous life may strain credibility, this is a
convincing portrait of adolescent alienation and naked need."
(Mar.)
-- Publishers Weekly