Ghost Season

Abbas debut novel, it is set in Saraaya, a fictional town "when the northern and southern parts of Sudan, still together, are soon to be engulfed by conflict and terror."

Fatin Abbas in an interview with 500 Words Magazine noted that: "Ghost Season is an attempt to make sense of my place of origins, as a diasporic Sudanese who has always looked back to Sudan and has always felt connected to what is now two countries—Sudan and South Sudan".

[1] The novel is set in Saraaya, a fictional town "when the northern and southern parts of Sudan, still together, are soon to be engulfed by conflict and terror.

[1] Sulaiman Addonia writing for The New York Times wrote that Abbas "mastered the courage to dive deep into Sudan’s wounds and taboos" and that "the stories of civilians in the grip of uncertainty make for a haunting account and a daring debut.

"[2] Michael Sears writing for the New York Journal of Books called Ghost Season a "wonderful debut from a truly talented writer" which summarising that "Abbas has drawn a rich and believable cast of characters, and we feel sympathy and involvement with them all.