Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE DEATH OF MURAT IDRISSI by Tommy Wieringa Kirkus Star

THE DEATH OF MURAT IDRISSI

by Tommy Wieringa & translated by Sam Garrett

Pub Date: Jan. 5th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-950354-36-8
Publisher: Scribe

Two Moroccan Dutch women are drawn into a deadly game when they engage the chaperoning services of a compatriot while on holiday in Rabat.

Tired of her monotonous life as a call-center worker in Rotterdam, Ilham Assouline decides a vacation in Morocco is just what she needs. Borrowing her sister’s passport since she doesn't have one of her own, Ilham convinces her friend Thouraya to come along. The two rent an Audi to get them around, but while the young women might have found Rotterdam stifling, the land of their ancestors provides no relief. Realizing that women in Morocco rarely travel alone, they engage the services of Saleh Benkassem, a fellow Moroccan Dutchman, to shield them from unsavory attention. Unfortunately, Saleh, who has made a life in the shadows, exploits the women’s vulnerability to his advantage. He introduces Ilham and Thouraya to a cripplingly poor family who want a better life for their son, Murat Idrissi. The women have a car, don’t they? Surely they can smuggle the young man through to Europe! Saleh assures Ilham and Thouraya that they will be paid for this service. Hesitant at first, Ilham is plagued by guilt over the family’s poverty. She and Thouraya eventually give in. But no good deed goes unpunished, and soon the women are in over their heads. Fluidly translated from Dutch and brilliantly paced, this slim novel delivers a high-voltage adrenaline rush while expertly weaving in commentary about displaced world citizens. The irony of their lives being circumscribed in different ways in both Rotterdam and Morocco is not lost on Ilham and Thouraya. In an expert twist, Thouraya uses precisely those constraints to the women’s advantage.

A cinematic, edge-of-your-seat thriller.