3.5 

The Hospital

By Ahmed Bouanani & Lara Vergnaud &
The Hospital by Ahmed Bouanani & Lara Vergnaud &  digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A tour de force: an utterly singular modern Moroccan classic

“When I walked through the large iron gate of the hospital, I must have still been alive…” So begins Ahmed Bouanani’s arresting, hallucinatory 1989 novel The Hospital, appearing for the first time in English translation. Based on Bouanani’s own experiences as a tuberculosis patient, the hospital begins to feel increasingly like a prison or a strange nightmare: the living resemble the dead; bureaucratic angels of death descend to direct traffic, claiming the lives of a motley cast of inmates one by one; childhood memories and fantasies of resurrection flash in and out of the narrator’s consciousness as the hospital transforms before his eyes into an eerie, metaphorical space. Somewhere along the way, the hospital’s iron gate disappears.

Like Sadegh Hedayat’s The Blind Owl, the works of Franz Kafka—or perhaps like Mann’s The Magic Mountain thrown into a meat-grinder—The Hospital is a nosedive into the realms of the imagination, in which a journey to nowhere in particular leads to the most shocking places.

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The Hospital Reviews

3.5
“The very first line felt like a warning disguised as poetry: “When I walked through the large iron gate of the hospital, I must have still been alive. At least that’s what I believed since I could smell the scents of a city on my skin, a city that I would never see again.” From that moment, I realised I wasn’t opening a book; I was stepping into a waking dream where the boundary between life and death is porous, and reality bleeds into feverish hallucination. I became a silent witness in C-Wing, surrounded by nameless figures known only by peculiar monikers such as Rover, Guzzler, and Fartface. They weren’t mere characters; they were fragments of memory, shadows of despair, sometimes painfully human, sometimes grotesquely absurd. I sat amongst them, tracing their broken voices, feeling the weight of a world where time had frozen between illness and the inevitable. Yet reading this book was no easy journey. The narrative is intentionally fragmented, often blurring sense and dream, leaving me disoriented and longing for firm ground. Each vignette carried its own beauty, but arranging them into a coherent whole required patience and a willingness to surrender to uncertainty. And beyond sickness, Bouanani whispers of marginalisation, the shadow of authoritarianism, and the heavy air of powerlessness. It was not simply about mortality; it was about silence enforced by structures bigger than us. By the time I closed the final page, I found myself changed. I learnt to embrace a story not as a straight line but as a labyrinth, where meaning emerges in the turns and detours. I became more attuned to the muted voices, the forgotten, the marginalised, the silenced, whose presence lingers long after the narrative fades. And above all, I came to appreciate language not just as a vehicle for story, but as light and shadow at once, conjuring an atmosphere that clings to you like a dream you cannot shake off. If you’re searching for a read that refuses to flatter you with clarity, that dares you to wander through corridors of memory and mirage, The Hospital is that rare book. It’s not something to rush; it’s something to live with, to let seep slowly into your bloodstream. Pick up the New Directions edition (translated by Lara Vergnaud, with an introduction by Anna Della Subin), and allow Bouanani’s vision to haunt you. You may not emerge unchanged.”

About Ahmed Bouanani

The filmmaker and writer Ahmed Bouanani (1938–2011) was born in Casablanca. When Bouanani was sixteen, during the final days of the colonial era, his father, a police officer, was assassinated—a tragedy that the artist returned to in his work for the rest of his life. Bouanani studied film at the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris for three years before returning to Morocco and going on to direct several classics of North African cinema. Most of his movies had their genesis in poems, and he published three collections during his lifetime, as well as the novel The Hospital, also appearing in English for the first time with New Directions. Never keen to publish, Bouanani left behind a trove of additional manuscripts.

Anna Della Subin

Anna Della Subin is the author of Not Dead But Sleeping (2017). Her work has also appeared in the London Review of Books, The New York Times, and The White Review, among other places. She is a contributing editor at Bidoun.

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