A luminous WWII novel of courage, exile, and survival in wartime North Africa.
Set in wartime North Africa, The Woman from Warsaw is a sweeping yet intimate portrait of courage, exile, and resilience. In luminous, sensory prose, Salah el Moncef traces the intertwined destinies of Mariam Khaldoon, a young girl coming of age amid the ruins of empire, and Esther Sanz, a Jewish refugee whose quiet defiance reshapes every life around her.
As the violence of war presses ever closer, Mariam’s childhood innocence gives way to a deeper awareness of loyalty, loss, and moral courage. Through the voices of women navigating a world transformed by fascism and conflict, the novel explores memory, identity, and the fragile possibilities of survival.
Rich in atmosphere and historical detail, The Woman from Warsaw is a powerful meditation on exile, resistance, and the enduring human search for dignity.