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Comics & Graphic Novels Biography & Memoir

The Dissident Club

Chronicle of a Pakistani Journalist in Exile

by (author) Taha Siddiqui & Hubert Maury

translated by David Homel

Publisher
Arsenal Pulp Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2025
Category
Biography & Memoir, General, History, Arab & Middle Eastern, NON-CLASSIFIABLE
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781551529530
    Publish Date
    Apr 2025
    List Price
    $32.95

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Description

An urgent and compelling graphic memoir about a Pakistani investigative journalist at odds with his fundamentalist family and the Pakistani military that attempts to kidnap him

In Islamabad in 2018, Pakistani investigative journalist Taha Siddiqui is kidnapped at gunpoint and barely escapes being killed. He flees the country on the first plane to France with questions left unanswered: What motivated the attack? Was the tyrannical Pakistani military involved?

The Dissident Club is an action-packed graphic memoir about Islamic politics, complex family dynamics, and one man's dedication to truth and principle. With illustrator Hubert Maury, Siddiqui, winner of the prestigious journalism award Prix Albert Londres, tells the story of his intriguing life and career, beginning with his childhood in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan under the stern gaze of a fundamentalist Islamic father. Siddiqui rebels against his religion, but his personal freedom is constrained by strict Islam, especially after his father joins a jihadi mosque.

Following the Gulf War and then the shock caused by 9/11, Siddiqui enters university and begins his personal emancipation. He becomes a journalist, but as he reveals the crimes of the Pakistani military, he learns the hard way that journalists are moving targets. Once in Paris, he opens the Dissident Club, a bar dedicated to helping political dissidents from around the world.

An expansive Pakistani coming-of-age story, The Dissident Club documents Siddiqui's experiences as a young man fighting for truth and justice against the harsh backdrop of Islamic fundamentalism and corruption.

About the authors

Taha Siddiqui is an award-winning Pakistani journalist living in exile in Paris. In Pakistan, Taha worked for the New York Times, The Guardian, France 24, Arte, the Christian Science Monitor, Al Jazeera, and many other international and local media organizations.

Taha Siddiqui's profile page

Hubert Maury is an artist and writer of graphic novels. The Dissident Club is his first graphic work to be published in English.

Hubert Maury's profile page

David Homel was born in Chicago in 1952 and left that city in 1970 for Paris, living in Europe the next few years on odd jobs and odder couches. He has published eight novels, from Electrical Storms in 1988 to The Teardown, which won the Paragraph Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction in 2019. He has also written young adult fiction with Marie-Louise Gay, directed documentary films, worked in TV production, been a literary translator, journalist, and creative writing teacher. He has translated four books for Linda Leith Publishing: Bitter Roase (2015), (2016), Nan Goldin: The Warrior Medusa (2017) and Taximan (2018). Lunging into the Underbrush is his first book of non-fiction. He lives in Montreal.

David Homel's profile page

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