

MUSCAT: Omani writer and translator Ahmed al Rahbi returns in his new novel 'The Suitcase of Souls', published by Oxygen Publishing, to the theme of alienation that has marked several of his earlier works. This time, however, he presents it with a deeper and more complex vision, juxtaposing the cities of Moscow and Muscat to explore human transformations in the face of isolation, nostalgia and existential questions.
The novel extends Al Rahbi’s earlier explorations of alienation seen in "The Immigrant" and "I and the Grandmother Nina", but with "The Suitcase of Souls" he broadens the artistic and psychological treatment through a narrative structure using what is critically known as the "broken glass" technique — the fragmentation of stories, the interweaving of fates and the psychological fractures of characters.
The novel is divided into three main sections and an appendix: "The Room of Crows", "Spring and Other Coincidences" and "For the Sake of Writing", plus an appendix. Each section has its own protagonist and events that intertwine with the others, giving the work a character close to a novelistic trilogy while retaining a coherent artistic and narrative unity.
Al Rahbi employs an experimental style that opens the door to multiple readings and interpretations, seeking to reveal the dimensions of alienation as a complex human and psychological experience where deferred freedom, thwarted ambitions and hidden relationships intersect. The cover text notes that the novel evokes "a life fading into the details of a heavy past, before returning to collide with the reality of characters preoccupied with their freedom, their delayed ambitions and their hidden love." - ONA
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