In Abdellah Taïa’s intimate novel The Tower of Tears, Moroccan society’s flaws and hypocrisy are revealed in cramped and lively streets, impoverished neighbourhoods, and bathhouses where clouds of steam mask salacious acts.
This is a poignant portrayal of life as experienced by its protagonists, with the Francophone Moroccan author inviting readers to explore the world of his harrowing childhood, including a poignant friendship and a challenging legacy.
Taïa tells of his early life through Youssef—a Moroccan professor in his 40s who has been living in France for 25 years. Upon his mother’s death in 2019, Youssef returns to Salé, his birthplace, to sell the family home that he has inherited. This triggers memories that are mixed with fleeting joy with lasting sorrow. Salé therefore becomes the stage in which the divisions and trials of his youth are replayed.
Confronting the past
As Youssef wanders Salé’s narrow streets, he confronts the ghosts of his past, especially Najib, his childhood friend whose tragic fate is entwined with Youssef’s. While Youssef leaves for France to study literature, which he has loved from a young age, Najib gets entangled in a relationship with a colonel and drug dealer, drawing him into an altogether darker world. Najib later returns to Salé following his friend’s death, seeking vengeance on the family who once shunned him.