Supplication, Nour AbiNakhoul
Supplication, Nour AbiNakhoul
List: $17.95 | Sale: $12.57
Club: $8.97

Supplication

Author: Nour Abi-Nakhoul

Narrator: Natalie Liconti

Unabridged: 5 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Strange Light

Published: 05/07/2024


Synopsis

"Astonishing." -Claudia Dey, author of Daughter.

A hallucinatory horror novel set deeply in the consciousness of a woman exploring a changed and frightening world.

Our protagonist comes to in a basement, tied to a chair, with a man looming over her. But someone has a knife. 

We follow her as she emerges from captivity into an unnamed, nightmarish city, seeking some meaning to her new reality. As figures emerge from the night, some offering sanctuary, and others judgement,  she keeps moving, making her way through this fever dream of a narrative. SUPPLICATION is a haunting, embodied tale of alienation, fear, and the quest for respite.

About The Author

Nour Abi-Nakhoul is a writer, editor, and researcher from Toronto, currently based in Montreal. Her reporting, opinions, criticism, and content have appeared in a variety of Canadian and American publications.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Sarah on April 03, 2024

Supplication by Nour Abi-Nakhoul is billed as "hallucinatory literary horror," and although it certainly lives up to that categorization, it still somehow fell short for me. Either its message went completely over my head (entirely possible), or it's just not that good.  I was interested for the firs......more

Goodreads review by Shu Wei on March 29, 2024

This book promises a horror-filled soul-seeking journey of a nameless protagonist as she emerges from traumatic captivity. Her harrowing journey is delivered through a stream of consciousness and purple prose ...In all honesty though, I feel like I need a literary detoxification after this journey. T......more

Goodreads review by Angyl on March 02, 2024

oh boy where do I start with this... Supplication begins with our nameless main character coming to in a dark and dingy basement, with a man standing over her. After making a quick escape, she finds her way back to her apartment, and then heads out into the night. For the rest of the book, we follow......more

Goodreads review by WickedReading on April 17, 2024

Thank you netgalley for an e-arc!! This is a tough one to rate and I have been going back and fourth since I finished it. I have decided a solid 3.5 (rounded to 4). The first ~30-35% was absolutely stunning. CONFUSING, and I stumbled through, but was able to hold onto enough. It felt like a situation......more


Quotes

“Supplication is a blood-and-guts horror novel mixed with a deeply lyrical narrator. It is about withholding, control, and the malleability of desire.”
—Thea McLachlan, Xtra Magazine

“Full of foreboding and committed to depicting the extremes of interiority and the stinging incursions of the world into the self, Supplication evokes the work of Poe Sadeq Hedayat while remaining alien and new.”
—Naben Ruthnum, author of The Grimmer

“What an astonishing, indelible, and courageous book. I have never read anything like it. It entered my bloodstream. It takes every risk. Supplication is about the states of transformation women must endure and survive––every trial, loss, ascension, surrender, inhabitation is written so completely in its animal radiance, sensuality, and horror; the page can hardly hold the prose. The voice never breaks. Nour Abi-Nakhoul is a beautiful writer, conveying a hellscape, her sentences as direct as they are prismatic. So transforming, compulsive, and original.”
—Claudia Dey, author of Daughter

“Dreamy yet hard, propulsive yet ever-circling, Nour Abi-Nakhoul’s Supplication reveals its mysteries slowly and painfully, as if withdrawing a dagger from its own viscera.”
—Davey Davis, author of X

“Terrifying and poetic, Supplication twists the existentialism of Sartre’s Nausea into a dark and disturbing form. Simultaneously cinematic horror and interior meditation, this book is as disorienting as Kafka at his most absurd. A philosophical reflection on the nature of selfhood and discontinuity that somehow manages to be both timeless and irresistibly urgent.”
—Carrie Jenkins, author of Sad Love