The Prayer of Anxiety wins 2025 International Prize for Arabic Fiction
25/04/2025
The Prayer of Anxiety by Mohamed Samir Nada was announced today as the winner of the 2025 International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF). The novel, published by Masciliana, was named as this year’s winner by Chair of Judges Mona Baker during a ceremony in Abu Dhabi that was also streamed online.
The judges selected the winning book from 124 submitted titles as the best novel published in Arabic between July 2023 and June 2024. The Prize was presented by Asma Siddiq Al Mutawa, founder of the Al Multaqa literary salon.
In the novel, storytelling is intertwined with symbolism in an unsettling narrative with multiple voices and layers. Depicting a transformative period in Egypt’s history, the decade after the 1967 Naksa, the book is an interrogation of the commonly held narrative of the Naksa and subsequent Arab illusions of victory.
Mona Baker, Chair of the 2025 JudgesThe Prayer of Anxiety won because it successfully transforms anxiety into an aesthetic and intellectual experience that resonates with the reader and awakens them to pressing existential questions. Mohamed Samir Nada blends polyphony and symbolism with captivating poetic language, making reading a sensory experience where revelation intersects with silence, and truth with illusion. In this novel, ‘Nagaa al-Manasi’ is more than just a village in Upper Egypt; it becomes a metaphor for societies besieged by fear and authoritarianism, giving the novel dimensions that transcend geography and touch upon universal human themes.
Professor Yasir Suleiman, Chair of the Board of TrusteesThe Prayer of Anxiety is an outstandingly beautiful and intriguing novel. Referencing history, its immediate conceptualisation around the 1967 war does not make it a historical novel. The occasion of this war is cleverly used to probe the structure of political tyranny in an isolated and forgotten village in Egypt. Coercion, manipulation, co-optation and the occlusion of meaning drive the inhabitants into submission and utter despair. Turning to organised religion for worldly redemption through a hurriedly concocted ‘prayer of anxiety’ offers little solace, rather brings occasion for dispute and no clear way out. Enchanted by the elegant writing and the deft structure of the novel, the reader is drawn into a dystopian microcosm with polyphonous meanings that adroitly captures one until the end. Crafted with considerable virtuosity and narrative acumen, The Prayer of Anxiety is engaging and thought-provoking. It is destined to become a classic in the Arab literary scene in years to come.
Based in Cairo, (where he is the financial director for a tourism company), Mohamed Samir Nada has written articles for numerous Arabic newspapers and websites, and published two earlier novels: Malika’s Kingdom (2016) and The Confession of the Walls (2021).
This is the first time the author has been recognised by the prize, and it is also the prize’s first Egyptian winner since 2009. The novel is published by Masciliana.
Alongside Mohamed Samir Nada, the 2024 shortlist features novels by Ahmed Fal Al Din (Mauritania), Azher Jirjees (Iraq), Taissier Khalaf (Syria), Nadia Najar (UAE), and Haneen Al-Sayegh (Lebanon).
The panel of five judges was chaired by Egyptian academic Mona Baker. Joining her on the judging panel were Moroccan academic and critic Said Bengrad, Emirati critic and academic Maryam Al Hashimi, Lebanese researcher and academic Bilal Orfali, and Finnish translator Sampsa Peltonen.
The aim of IPAF is to reward excellence in contemporary Arabic creative writing and to encourage the readership of high-quality Arabic literature internationally through the translation and publication in other major languages of novels recognised by the prize (whether as winners, or on shortlists or longlists).
The prize is sponsored by the Abu Dhabi Arabic Language Centre, at the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi.