Mohammed G. Alghamdi’s Writers and Nations: The Case of American and Saudi Literatures offers a unique and illuminating comparative study of two national literatures during critical formative periods: American literature of the nineteenth century and Saudi Arabian literature of the late twentieth century to the present. Alghamdi’s cross-cultural perspective yields original insights into how literature contributes to nation formation by mediating differences between dominant and marginalized communities. With its astute and surprising comparisons, Alghamdi’s book will be of interest to scholars of both national literatures and should serve to elevate the global profile of the underappreciated Saudi authors it treats.
— Carl Ostrowski, author of Literature and Criminal Justice in Antebellum America
Books on Saudi literature in English, or for that matter in any language other than Arabic are so rare that the publication of a study that offers the English speaking world an overview of that literature is welcome enough. But when that study is presented from a comparative perspective that illuminates the ties between Saudi and American literature, it assumes an even higher value. I am quite impressed to see Dr. Alghamdi’s book published.
— Saad A. Albazei, Author of, among others, Desert Culture (1991); Cultural Encounters (2014)
In this groundbreaking study of the development of U.S. and Saudi national literatures, Mohammed Alghamdi argues that writers continually challenge and thus re-inscribe the boundaries of who is included within the privileges of citizenship nations provide and withhold. Comparative analyses of work by Henry David Thoreau and Hamza Shehata, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Abdo Khal, Kate Chopin and Raja Alem, Charles Chesnutt and Alwan Alsuhaymi focus on critiques of political injustice, religious intolerance, gender inequalities, and racial prejudice. Alghamdi shines the light on Saudi writers who are not widely known, even in the Arab world, showing us that a rich and distinctive modern literary tradition is emerging on the Saudi peninsula. His work productively stresses the dynamic potential of nation and the power of literature to effect social change.
— Allen Hibbard, Middle Tennessee State University