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The Deaf-Mute Boy by Joseph Geraci — book cover

The Deaf-Mute Boy

by Joseph Geraci
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Overview

The Deaf-Mute Boy—equal parts travel story, love story, and a resonant confrontation with the Muslim world—is the tale of a gay American professor immersed in a North African society. Maurice Burke, an archaeologist, is invited to speak at a conference in the bustling port town of Sousse, Tunisia. At first disillusioned by its rampant tourism and squalid commercialism, Maurice becomes intrigued by his surroundings after meeting a local deaf-mute boy. While exploring a vibrant souk, Maurice encounters a religious leader who guides him on a fateful introduction to the boy’s family. As Maurice’s involvement with the deaf-mute boy intensifies, he finds himself drawn into a maze of Tunisian politics, culture, and religion.

Synopsis

The Deaf-Mute Boy—equal parts travel story, love story, and a resonant confrontation with the Muslim world—is the tale of a gay American professor immersed in a North African society. Maurice Burke, an archaeologist, is invited to speak at a conference in the bustling port town of Sousse, Tunisia. At first disillusioned by its rampant tourism and squalid commercialism, Maurice becomes intrigued by his surroundings after meeting a local deaf-mute boy. While exploring a vibrant souk, Maurice encounters a religious leader who guides him on a fateful introduction to the boy’s family. As Maurice’s involvement with the deaf-mute boy intensifies, he finds himself drawn into a maze of Tunisian politics, culture, and religion.

Publishers Weekly

West meets East and rich meets poor in this thin story of the ill-fated friendship between a gay Columbia University professor and a teenage Tunisian deaf-mute boy. Maurice Burke, in Sousse, Tunisia, to speak at an archeology conference, meets Nidhal on the beach and shortly thereafter becomes bent on helping the boy after seeing him bullied. Maurice turns to a local imam for help and is warned that matters are too complicated. Maurice doesn't heed the warnings and continues to pursue what he believes are the boy's best interests. Unfortunately, Maurice's powerful sense of obligation to the boy remains mysterious and muddled, and though Geraci (Loving Sander) does an excellent job of capturing Tunisian medina life, his portrayal of political unrest and violence is vague. The climax, which takes place during a riot, makes the novel feel like a morality play. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Joseph Geraci

Joseph Geraci is the author of the novels Loving Sander and Marrying Tom, and editor of the anthology Dares to Speak. He was a member of the editorial collective of The Catholic Worker and is  director of the Paidika Foundation in Amsterdam. For many years he has been a dealer in rare photographs.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

West meets East and rich meets poor in this thin story of the ill-fated friendship between a gay Columbia University professor and a teenage Tunisian deaf-mute boy. Maurice Burke, in Sousse, Tunisia, to speak at an archeology conference, meets Nidhal on the beach and shortly thereafter becomes bent on helping the boy after seeing him bullied. Maurice turns to a local imam for help and is warned that matters are too complicated. Maurice doesn't heed the warnings and continues to pursue what he believes are the boy's best interests. Unfortunately, Maurice's powerful sense of obligation to the boy remains mysterious and muddled, and though Geraci (Loving Sander) does an excellent job of capturing Tunisian medina life, his portrayal of political unrest and violence is vague. The climax, which takes place during a riot, makes the novel feel like a morality play. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Geraci's (Loving Sander; Marrying Tom) provocative travel story involves a contemporary gay man's visit to postcolonial northern Africa. Archaeologist Maurice Burke attends a scholarly conference in the coastal town of Sousse, Tunisia. His singular encounter with Nidhal, a local deaf-mute boy, not only alters his outlook on Sousse which he had considered a commercial tourist trap but also serves as the catalyst for Burke's fateful plunge into a Tunisian political scene dominated by powerful religious, cultural, and economic forces. "I'm afraid you have Arab fever," counsels Burke's friend Henri Meursault, a famous French writer. When Meursault suggests that Burke is repeating the sexual explorations of Andr Gide, he also questions whether it isn't the youthful Nidhal who has seduced Burke rather than Tunisia. Fortunately, Geraci's novel doesn't devolve into an account of a pederastic tryst. Instead, this book succeeds because Geraci adeptly shapes Burke's lingering in Sousse into a thoughtful excavation, slowly unearthing the archaeologist's emotions about Eddie, his AIDS-stricken partner in New York, and his personal and professional inadequacies. Recommended. Faye A. Chadwell, Univ. of Oregon Libs., Eugene Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Gay Columbia professor loses his bearings-and heart-when he travels to Tunisia for a conference. When hyper-literate archaeology lecturer Maurice Burke arrives in Sousse, Tunisia, he is filled with disdain for the tacky tourist culture and economic avarice of the locals. His opinion begins to change around the time he meets Nidhal, an impoverished youth he first spies playing in the ocean. Nidhal claims to be 15, looks younger, and can neither speak nor hear. The two strike up a fairly innocent friendship, Maurice taking the sweet-natured Nidhal swimming and buying him ice cream. Seeing bruises on the boy's skinny body, Maurice grows increasingly concerned that some older boys are bullying Nidhal, who does not go to school. Hoping to do something to help the boy, he approaches a charismatic local Muslim scholar who knows Nidhal, and finds himself both drawn to and repelled by an exotic culture he does not understand. Is Nidhal involved with some kind of fundamentalist movement? Could he possibly take on guardianship of the young Tunisian? The smitten scholar then extends his stay and struggles with his conflicted feelings for Nidhal, which seem to combine paternal regard and contained lust. Meanwhile, Maurice satisfies his baser urges with a local hustler, while fielding calls from his increasingly needy (and HIV-positive) partner Eddie back in New York. He also must contend with the hysteria of his close friend Henri, who, familiar with the hypnotic allure of North Africa, wants to jet from Paris to Sousse for some kind of intervention with his increasingly wayward friend-if he's not too late. Geraci (Marrying Tom, 2001, etc.) has created a believable (if occasionally pretentious) heroin the well-meaning intellectual Maurice. He does not fare as well with the plot. Evocative Mediterranean atmosphere, but the love story is a bit of snooze, and the author merely touches on the religious and political complexities of that part of the world.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2006
Publisher
University of Wisconsin Press
Pages
200
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780299218942

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