Amal Bouchareb (أمل بوشارب)
Amal Bouchareb was born in 1984 in Damascus. She released one short story collection Thirteen on Her (عليها ثلاثة عشر) in 2014 published by Chihab eds, and a thriller Flickers of a Star (سَكرات نجمة) in 2015 with Chihab also. Her first work is a collection of thirteen stories, with each introducing a woman, twelve women in total like the 12 apostles whose characters meet and merge in the last.
Her thriller (سَكرات نجمة) mixes esoterism, the hand of Fatma, murder and Algerian music, and deserves a lot more attention than it has so far.
Nassima Bouloufa (نسيمة بولوفة)
Nassima Bouloufa is a discreet writer of short stories, who is also one of the rare Algerian women to write detective fiction. She published her detective story Heart Beats in the Dead of the Night (نبضات آخر الليل) in 2015 with Viscera eds.
Unlike most other Algerian detective novels, her story is netted around woman as central characters.
Zakia Allal (زاكية علال)
In 2015, she released her first novel Returning to My Grave (عائد إلى قبري), which tells the story of an Algerian journalist covering Iraq just before it falls while living in Algeria during the black decade. Her use of magic realism and a use of the fantastic, almost gothic, are particularly interesting traits in her short-stories (see شرايين عارية online on open access).
Assia Ali Moussa (آسيا علي موسى)
Animals are very much present in Assia’s work and this often places her stories on the border of the world of dreams and hallucinations.
Fadela Farouk (فضيلة فاروق)
12 Women Writers (2012) she has published four novels, and two short story collections between 1997 and 2012. In 2015, she announced the release of a poetry collection (في حب قديس) published in Beirut.
Fadela Farouk was born in Constantine in 1967. She is one of the strongest women’s voices of Algerian literature on matters of women’s rights and who openly discussed issues of rape and violence against of women. Her work is perhaps one of the most neglected of her generation especially since she left to live in Lebanon. According to Banipal Magazine who featured her in their issue 44
Some articles report that part of her work was translated in French and Spanish yet none are well known nor easily available.
Rabia Djelti (ربيعة جلطي)
Rabia Djelti is mostly known as a poet but she is also a notable novelist. Her latest novel Peppermint Nostalgia(حنين بالنعناع) co-published in Lebanon and Algeria (2014) tells the story of a young woman Dhaouia who realises she has wings. She becomes aware of a sixth continent in which all the human artists no matter the era they influenced still live. Last year she published the Prophetess (النبية) a long poem in the form of a narration (here is an extract). She is, incidentally, the novelist Amin Zaoui’s other half.
Some of her poetry was translated into French but most such translated works are not easily available or out of stock.
* article published on arablit.org