About

Youssef Rakha is an Egyptian novelist, poet and essayist working in both Arabic and English.
But above all, I think, your major achievement is in being what Foucault would call “a discourse initiator” — someone who single handedly changes a discipline, and in this case the discipline of the Arabic novel. — Anton Shammas
Youssef Rakha is an Egyptian writer of fiction and nonfiction working in Arabic and English. He is the author of the novels The Book of the Sultan’s Seal (Interlink, 2014) and The Crocodiles (Seven Stories Press, 2015) as well as Paolo, which was on the long list of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction in 2017 and won the 2017 Sawiris Award. The Dissenters (Graywolf, 2025) is his first novel to be written in English.
He was among the 39 best Arab writers under 40 selected for the Hay Festival Beirut39 event in 2010. His work has appeared in publications such as the Atlantic, BOMB, The Dial, the Kenyon Review, the New York Times, Ploughshares, and many others. It is widely anthologized and translated.
Youssef is the only child of a disillusioned Marxist and a woman who struggled against incredible odds to go to university. He lives with his own family in Cairo, where he was born and raised. Among other things, he has worked as a photographer, cultural journalist, literary translator, and creative writing coach.
Selected Writing, Credits, Coverage
Requiem for a Suicide Bomber (The Atlantic)
Sargon Boulus Revisited (The Markaz Review)
Thus Spoke Che Nawwarah (Kenyon Review)
Excerpt from The Dissenters (Triple Canopy)
Excerpt from Paulo (Asymptote)
Excerpt from The Crocodiles (BOMB)
Excerpt from The Book of the Sultan's Seal (The Collagist)
Foreword to Brains Confounded (Library of Arabic Literature), 2019
Essay in The Ordinary Chaos, 2019 (2024)
Afterword to A Horse at the Door (Tenement Press), 2024
Chapter in Pharaoh (British Museum), 2024
Conversation with Hilary Plum (Music and Literature, 2015)
Paul Starkey's chapter on The Book of the Sultan's Seal (Studying Modern Arabic Literature, 2016)
Madeline Beach Carey's overview of my work (Full Stop Magazine, 2022)
Conversation with Rémy Ngamije (Doek!, 2024)