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Book Review: The Water Thief

Marina Gerner finds hope in a tale of a troubled hero in Claire Hajaj's fiction

September 20, 2018 15:49
Claire Beirut
1 min read

The main protagonist of Claire Hajaj’s The Water Thief is Nick, an architect in London who breaks out of a comfortable relationship with his fiancée, their customised stationery, dinners over “braised chicken and Chablis” and “aspirational house hunting” to “do something meaningful” before he “settles down”.

So he sets out on a sabbatical to help build a hospital at an unnamed African village at the edge of the Sahara. We learn that Nick had a troubled relationship with his Jewish father who always put his work as a doctor before his family, while the tragic loss of his best friend weighs heavily on Nick’s mind.

Throughout his journey, the conflicts and tragedies of his past continue to follow him, and acquire new shapes.

Once he settles into the village, Nick finds himself attracted to his host’s enigmatic wife. When a deadly drought descends on the village, he decides his moment has come to make a real difference, but local politics, radicalisation and corruption stand in his way.

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