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A Recitation of Becoming

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July 01, 2025

This debut novel plunges into the fissures of contemporary womanhood stretched across the blazing Arabian Peninsula

- Ruchira Gupta

A Recitation of Becoming

IN Gulf, Mo Ogrodnik does what only a debut novelist of fierce moral clarity and cinematic instinct could attempt—she plunges headlong into the fissures of contemporary womanhood stretched across the blazing, glittering mirage of the Arabian Peninsula. But Ogrodnik is not interested in spectacle. She focuses on the daily, the domestic, the detritus of women's lives caught in systems designed to erase them. Her goal is to render the macro through the micro—each woman's torn veil, blistered foot, confiscated phone, and unspoken rage becomes its own epic.

This is not a novel about a place, although it is indelibly rooted in one. It is a story about rupture—the gulf between power and powerlessness, employer and worker, ambition and confinement, and perhaps most poignantly, the gulf within each woman. The novel's power lies not in a singular narrative arc but in the dissonant harmony of its five interlinked stories. The “quintet structure” Ogrodnik employs is not simply formal—it is feminist. Rejecting linearity, it embraces simultaneity, contradiction, and accumulation. In this, Gulf belongs on the shelf beside Claudia Rankine's Citizen, Michael Ondaatje's Billy the Kid, and W.G. Sebald's Austerlitz. It is a literary collage, a film reel spliced from trauma, resistance, and fugitive hope.

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