Hisham Matar’s My Friends is a novel about three friends living in political exile due to the oppressive Gaddafi regime in Libya. The book is narrated by Khaled Abd al Hady, who left Benghazi in 1983 to attend the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and has lived in London for thirty-two years. Khaled’s life goes through challenging times under Gaddafi’s dictatorship; he suffers from being away from his family and faces difficulties in starting over a new place. Throughout the novel, Matar skilfully navigates the delicate balance between the personal and the political. The characters’ struggles are inextricably linked to the broader historical and social forces shaping their lives.
Download the Book ReviewMy Friends: A Novel
Written by: Ferhat Polat
Ferhat Polat
Ferhat Polat is a Chevening Scholar from the 2022 cohort and a researcher at the TRT World Research Centre. Holding an MA in Middle East Studies from the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter, he specializes in North African geopolitics and security, with a particular focus on Libya. Polat is often invited as a commentator on news channels and has contributed numerous essays and articles on geopolitical issues that have been published in various journals, newspapers, and digital outlets.
MORE FROM AUTHOR
Libya as a Theatre of Global and Regional Power Competition
The paper examines Libya’s transformation into a major arena of regional and global power competition since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. The...
Corridors of Power: The Strategic Stakes of the Türkiye–Libya Deal
The 2019 maritime delimitation agreement between Tür- kiye and Libya represents a pivotal moment in the geopoli- tics of the Eastern Mediterranean. Signed between...
MORE FROM CURRENT CATEGORY
The Forgotten Front: Displacement, Climate, and Conflict in the Sahel
The Sahel has become one of the world’s most overlooked frontlines, where conflict, climate shocks, and fragile governance intersect to drive a rapidly expanding...
Safe Return or Not? Expectations vs. Reality of Syrian Refugee Repatriation
The fall of Bashar al-Assad in December 2024 was hailed as a turning point that could finally enable millions of displaced Syrians to return...
Borders Under Pressure: Rethinking Migration Policies for a Changing World
At a time when 122.6 million people worldwide have been forcibly displaced—the highest number under international protection since World War II—our global migration systems...
