Siba al-Harez is a nom de plume. Given the subject of this debut novel, this is no bad thing. Even the name of the translator is not listed at the translator's requestA (as the copyright page announces). The Others is Saudi Arabia's, perhaps even the Gulf countries', first lesbian novel: published in Beirut in 2006, it swiftly became a bestseller. The identity of the author remains shrouded; all we are allowed to know is that she is a 26-year-old Saudi woman from Al Qatif. Al Qatif, on the eastern coast of the country, seems remote but the knowledge that this is a predominantly Shi'ite region brings a different kind of particularity to bear on the remoteness: the Shi'ites are an oppressed and heavily monitored minority group in the country. While this remains unarticulated in the novel, it can only magnify the isolation that comes with the narrator's knowledge of her sexual otherness in a country not known for its liberal attitudes. The unnamed 16-year-old narrator gives a raw and immediate account of her relationship with a glamorous, possessive, intense peer, named Dai, in a girls' school. In his new book, Inside the Kingdom, Robert Lacey writes of how it is common for Saudi women, sealed off hermetically from any kind of male contact, to form lesbian attachments. The Others opens a door into one of the darkest and least-known corners of this society and the view is revelatory, sometimes shocking, always compelling. Neel Mukherjee The Financial Times 15th November 2009