Born in 1978, Alharthi was educated in Oman and in the United Kingdom. She obtained her
PhD in classical Arabic literature from the
University of Edinburgh, graduating in 2011. In 2010, Alharthi was offered a professorship in classical Arabic literature at
Sultan Qaboos University in
Muscat, Oman. As of 2021, she is an
associate professor. Alharti has three children. Alharthi has published three collections of short stories, three children's books, and four novels (
Manamat,
Sayyidat al-Qamar, Narinjah, and
Harir al-Ghazala). She has also authored academic works. Her work has been translated into English, Serbian, Korean, Italian, and German and published in
Banipal magazine. Alharthi won the Sultan Qaboos Award for Culture, Arts and Literature for her novel
Narinjah (
Bitter Orange) in 2016.
Sayyidat al-Qamar was shortlisted for the Zayed Award in 2011. An English translation by
Marilyn Booth was published in the UK by Sandstone Press in June 2018 under the title
Celestial Bodies, and won the
Man Booker International Prize in 2019.
Sayyidat el-Qamar was the first work by an Arabic-language writer to be awarded the Man Booker International Prize, and the first novel by an Omani woman to appear in English translation. The judges heralded the book as "a richly imagined, engaging and poetic insight into a society in transition and into lives previously obscured." As of 2020, translation rights to
Sayyidat el-Qamar have been sold in Azerbaijani, Brazilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese, Croatian, English, French, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Malayalam, Norwegian, Persian, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sinhalese, Slovenian, Swedish, and Turkish. Alharthi's novel
Narinjah, also translated by Marilyn Booth, was published in English under the title
Bitter Orange Tree. It was named one of the best reviewed works in translation for 2022, and one of 100 must-read books of the year by
TIME. In the
Times Literary Supplement, Diana Darke called it "highly attuned" and "deeply emotional". Some reviews were more mixed - in
The Guardian,
Maya Jaggi commented on "structural flaws and an overambitious global reach make for a patchy read". while in the
Washington Post, Ron Charles acclaimed an "exquisitely sensitive novel", that nevertheless "spins its wheels without going anywhere."
Harir al-Ghazala, Alharti's fourth novel to be published in Arabic, tells the story of a woman who was abandoned at birth. It was published by Lebanese publishing house Dar Al Adab in 2021. == Bibliography ==