Ibtisam Abdallah is a noted Iraqi novelist, short-story writer and literary translator. She was born in [[Kirkuk but has lived mostly in [[Baghdad. As of 2001, she had published four novels and one collection of short stories. The best known of her novels is Mesopotamia, published in Baghdad in 2001. The same year, she became the editor in chief of Al-Thaqafa Al-Ajnabiyya (Foreign Culture), a quarterly journal devoted to foreign literature and culture, the only one of its kind in Iraq.[1] (The magazine ceased publishing in the aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.)

Abdallah has translated several Western literary works into Arabic, notably JM Coetzee's award-winning novel Waiting for the Barbarians.[2] She has also translated the memoirs of Mikis Theodorakis and Angela Davis. Abdallah's writing is known for its juxtaposition of feminist themes with contemporary social and political issues. Some of her short stories have appeared in English translation. She is also well-known in Iraq as a journalist and a television figure.

Works translated into English

  1. ^ Review of Mesopotamia by Ferial Ghazoul in Al-Ahram Weekly, June 2003
  2. ^ Profile on Banipal website