Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller

Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller

The streets of Cairo make strange music. The echoing calls to prayer; the raging insults hurled between drivers; the steady crescendo of horns honking; the shouts of street vendors; the television sets and radios blaring from every sidewalk. Nadia Wassef knows this song by heart.

In 2002, with her sister, Hind, and their friend, Nihal, she founded Diwan, a fiercely independent bookstore. They were three young women with no business degrees, no formal training, and nothing to lose. At the time, nothing like Diwan existed in Egypt. Culture was languishing under government mismanagement, and books were considered a luxury, not a necessity. Ten years later, Diwan had become a rousing success, with ten locations, 150 employees, and a fervent fan base.

Frank, fresh, and very funny, Nadia Wassef’s memoir tells the story of this journey. Its eclectic cast of characters features Diwan’s impassioned regulars, like the demanding Dr. Medhat; Samir, the driver with CEO aspirations; meditative and mythical Nihal; silent but deadly Hind; dictatorial and exacting Nadia, a self-proclaimed bitch to work with–and the many people, mostly men, who said Diwan would never work.

Shelf Life is a portrait of a country hurtling toward revolution, a feminist rallying cry, and an unapologetic crash course in running a business under the law of entropy. Above all, it is a celebration of the power of words to bring us home.

Blunt, honest, funny.

Jenny Lawson, author of Broken (in the Best Possible Way)

Review by 1000 Libraries

In the opening of Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller, Nadia Wassef admits to a beautiful, desperate ambition: to open a bookstore in the heart of Cairo. To do so in a city of noise, dust, and deep-seated tradition is not just a business move. It is an act of romance.

“Those of us who write love letters know that their aims are impossible. We try, and fail, to make the ethereal material. We strive against the inevitable ending, knowing that everything is transient. We choose to be grateful for the time, however brief it may be.”

Wassef doesn’t just tell the story of a shop called Diwan; she chronicles the struggle to anchor something as fragile as intellectual freedom into the concrete reality of an Egyptian street. The book is organized like the sections of a bookstore, and each genre is used as a lens to examine the lives of the people who walk through her doors.

Shelf Life is a sharp, witty memoir about the birth of Diwan, Egypt’s first modern bookstore. Wassef delivers a masterclass in bibliotherapy, blending the struggles of female entrepreneurship with a deep dive into Cairo’s cultural heartbeat. It is a must-read for anyone who believes that independent bookstores are the last standing cathedrals of modern thought.

“The author packs an entire library’s worth of subjects into this captivating memoir.”

“Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller is the story of what happens when dauntless optimism collides with bureaucratic torpor – a tale of shake-ups and shakedowns.”

“This is a book for book people, challenging the perspective of the traditional American and European publishing worlds with verve and style.”

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