Role Novelist Name Laila Lalami | Genre fiction | |
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Notable works Books Hope and Other Dangero, Secret Son, The Moor's Account | ||
Nationality Morocco, United States |
Moroccan american author laila lalami on her second novel secret son
Laila Lalami (Arabic: ليلى العلمي, born 1968) is a Moroccan-American novelist and essayist. After earning her undergraduate degree in Morocco, she received a fellowship to study in the UK, where she earned an MA in linguistics.
Contents
- Moroccan american author laila lalami on her second novel secret son
- Laila lalami the moor s account
- Early life
- Career
- For The Moors Account
- Other honors
- For Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits
- References

In 1992 Lalami moved to the United States, completing a PhD in linguistics at the University of Southern California. She began publishing her writing in 1996, and in 2015 was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction for her 2014 novel The Moor's Account, which received strong critical praise.

Laila lalami the moor s account
Early life

Lalami was born and raised in Rabat, Morocco, where she earned her BA in English from Mohammed V University. In 1990, she received a British Council fellowship to study in England and completed an MA in Linguistics at University College, London. After graduating, she returned to Morocco and worked briefly as a journalist and commentator. In 1992 she moved to Los Angeles to attend the University of Southern California, from which she graduated with a PhD in Linguistics.
Career

Lalami began writing fiction and nonfiction in English in 1996. Her literary criticism, cultural commentary, and opinion pieces have appeared in The Boston Globe, Boston Review, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Daily Beast, and elsewhere. In 2016, she was named both a columnist for The Nation magazine and a critic-at-large for The Los Angeles Times Book Review.

Her first book, the collection of short stories Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits, was published in 2005. It follows four Moroccan immigrants who try to cross the Straits of Gibraltar on a lifeboat. The book has an unusual narrative structure: the opening story takes place while the main characters are making the crossing; the next four stories flash back to the characters' lives before their fateful journey; and the final four stories flash forward, so that the reader finally finds out who made it across and who didn't. Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits received wide critical acclaim. In the Washington Post, Carolyn See called it "a bracing and beautiful little novel," while Pankaj Mishra, writing in the New York Review of Books, noted that "Lalami writes about her home country without the expatriate’s self-indulgent and often condescending nostalgia.”
Lalami's second book, the novel Secret Son (2009), is a coming-of-age story set in the slums of Casablanca. A young college student named Youssef El Mekki discovers that his father—whom he'd been led to believe was a high school teacher, dead for many years—is in fact a businessman and live across town. But Youssef's burgeoning relationship with his father, and his sudden change in fortune, are threatened by social and political unrest in the city. The novel explores themes of identity and class in a world increasingly divided by political ideology. Secret Son was longlisted for the Orange Prize.
The Moor's Account, Lalami's third book, was published by Pantheon Books in September 2014. The novel is told from the perspective of Estevanico, a Moroccan slave who was part of the ill-fated Narváez expedition, and who later became the first black explorer of America. The Moor's Account won the American Book Award., the Hurston-Wright Legacy Award, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.
Lalami has received an Oregon Literary Arts grant, a Fulbright Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She was selected in 2009 by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader.
She is a professor of creative writing at the University of California, Riverside.