Salon recommends

A New Yorker writer on militant Islam in Egypt, a sprawling literary science fiction novel and more

Published October 15, 2001 5:17PM (EDT)

What we're reading, what we're liking

A Portrait of Egypt: A Journey Through the World of Militant Islam by Mary Anne Weaver
As Egypt emerges as a key seedbed for militant Islamist movements, it seems more important than ever to understand the social climate that fosters such movements as al-Jihad and men like Osama bin Laden's chief advisor Ayman Al-Zawahiri and Mohammed Atef, who is suspected of planning the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Although in this 1999 book Weaver mostly focuses on Egypt's leaders and the infamous blind Egyptian cleric behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombings, Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman (the brand new paperback edition includes a portrait of bin Laden), her richly textured descriptions of political life in Egypt are much more evocative and thoughtful than the usual newspaper briefings. Some parts of the book originally appeared in the New Yorker, where Weaver is a staff writer. (Salon reviewed the book when it was originally published, as well.)

-- Laura Miller

Perdido Street Station by China Miiville
This science fiction novel rocked my world. Sex with giant insects. Dream-sucking slake moths. An action-packed thriller with high literary production values. A sprawling, vastly ambitious, exquisitely executed science fiction fantasy with the best possible ending: You want more, more, more.

-- Andrew Leonard

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