Maureen Freely reviewed the book for
The Guardian, and wrote that "it defies any expectations you might have built up from [knowing about Tazmamart]. It refuses the well-meaning but tired and ultimately dehumanising conventions of human rights horror journalism; it is not a political tract.... Although it is technically a novel, it is a novel stripped, like its subject, of all life's comforts." Freely wrote about the main character that "there is something
Beckettian about his limited environment and studied hopelessness", and compared his literary voice to "the language of
Islamic mysticism". Freely ended the review: "It is, despite its dark materials, a joy to read." The novel received the
International Dublin Literary Award in 2004. ==See also==