Twenty Years & Then Some: The Year the Compass Broke

I found Twenty Years and Then Some to be a restless, intimate novel about a woman trying to make sense of desire, faith, memory, and selfhood while moving between London, Iraq, and later Mashhad, all under the pressure of romantic entanglements that never quite become refuge. Aisha’s story unfolds through encounters with men like Mustafa, whose gentleness can’t kindle love, and Diyaa, whose emotional evasions wound precisely because the chemistry feels real, while her spiritual life keeps pulling her toward shrines, graves, prophecy, and questions of intercession that are not ornamental to the plot but the plot’s deepest engine. What emerges is less a conventional romance than a record of inner weather, a book about a woman whose compass is broken not because she lacks intelligence, but because feeling, belief, and longing keep pointing in different directions.

The book’s voice has a confessional intensity that can be startling, sometimes almost feverish, and when it works, it really works. I kept thinking of the scene in Najaf where shared laughter with a grieving woman breaks the heaviness for a moment, and of the visit to the grandmother’s grave, where longing for marriage, fear of death, family history, and theology all gather in one charged space. Those moments feel lived rather than engineered. The prose often reaches for grandeur, but it also knows when to come down into a sharply human detail, like Aaliya arriving with thyme pastries and Arabic coffee, or Aisha watching Diyaa’s restraint on the sofa and feeling that non-kiss as a form of intimacy more unsettling than an actual touch. I admired how often the writing refuses embarrassment. It’s earnest in a way many contemporary novels are scared to be, and that earnestness gives it heat. The novel can sometimes circle the same emotions, the narrator’s self-awareness sometimes deepens the feeling, and sometimes merely names it again. Still, even that repetition began to feel like part of the design, the rhythm of someone who knows the lesson intellectually long before she can bear to live it.

I was equally taken by the book’s ideas, especially because they’re inseparable from the narrator’s emotional life. This isn’t a novel that treats faith as background decoration. Its Shia spiritual imagination, its meditations on shrines, the dead, intercession, visions, and historical erasure give the whole book a metaphysical charge that sets it apart from more familiar breakup fiction. I found the contrast between Aisha and Diyaa especially revealing: he reaches for Helen Fisher and the anatomy of love, trying to reduce heartbreak to something legible and clinical, while she insists that love belongs as much to myth, intuition, and holiness as it does to biology. That tension gives the novel real intellectual texture. I also appreciated the passages where private suffering opens onto political and sectarian history, especially the reflections on demolition, memory, and the Wahhabi project. Those sections are bold and deeply felt, though they can be more essayistic than dramatic. I liked that the novel had something serious to say, but there were moments when I felt the fiction briefly gave way to argument. Even so, the argument is never hollow. It comes from a bruised inner life, which gives it conviction.

I came away from this book feeling I’d spent time inside a mind that is ardent, contradictory, wounded, and fiercely searching. It’s strongest when it allows romance, theology, and memory to collide without trying to tidy the mess. I’d recommend it to readers who like emotionally candid literary fiction, especially those interested in faith, sectarian identity, diasporic loneliness, and the unnerving gap between knowing what’s good for you and wanting something else anyway.

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on April 1, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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