Karim Miské (born 1964, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire[1]) is a Mauritanian-French documentary film maker and writer whose debut novel Arab Jazz (2015), a work of crime fiction, was awarded the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière.
The novel's main character, Ahmed Taroudant, lives in the north-east of Paris in the 19th arrondissement, and is "a typical French Arab–religiously non-observant, confused about his identity, haunted by the past.
Two investigators (also readers of crime fiction) are already on the case, and Taroudant himself also tries to uncover what happened.The novel was translated into English by Sam Gordon.
[3] The reviewer for The Guardian, Robin Yassin-Kassab, noted that the novel is full of references to other works of fiction, including James Ellroy's White Jazz.
Yassin-Kassab criticized the "somewhat clumsy" dialogue and some "too obviously functional" characters, but praised the settings and the portrayal of French second-generation immigrants from Northern Africa, and Miské's scope: "Everyone’s been damaged by their heritage; everyone’s vulnerable to inner darkness and the explanatory narcotic of grand narrative".