"The story Susan Abulhawa tells in this marvelous novel is hard to bear but impossible to ignore. Her vision is precise, courageous, and dazzling." - Teju Cole
"Abulhawa's prose is luminous; her control of a complex weaving of narrative voices-young and old, male and female, magical and real-is masterful." ― The Independent
"[Abulhawa] is a fine observer of female kinship ... A powerful read." ― Financial Times
"Abulhawa surprises us by continually unfolding new stories ...These are secrets we need to know, secrets that will educate us about ourselves, and Gaza. " ― The Guardian
"Fierce and powerful and deeply moving, you will want to read it again and again." ― Marxist Review
"A family saga with global reach, these stories of fortune tellers, fighters, little girls and old women, jump off the page and into the soul and reach far beyond any headline or statistic, past the head, to the heart." ― Laleh Khadivi, author of The Age of Orphans and The Walking
"Magical ... The way the story is told is haunting. It pulls you in and you want to never emerge." ― The Asian Age
07/06/2015
Abulhawa’s (Mornings in Jenin) tale of a Palestinian family is suffused with mystery, pain, and love. During the Israeli attack on the camps in Gaza on Dec. 27, 2008, young Khaled experiences something akin to Locked-in syndrome, something that he calls “a place of blue,” and from this state he is able to both witness the present and participate in the past. He is real enough to teach his great-aunt Mariam to read back in the family’s home village of Beit Daras long before he is born. In the present, Nur, an American-born psychotherapist of Palestinian descent, hears of Khaled and is spurred to travel to Palestine to attempt to help him, not knowing that she is herself a lost member of the family. Nur’s own life has been filled with loss and abuse. Her beloved grandfather died before he could bring her back to Gaza, and she was sexually assaulted by her stepfather before being rescued by a loving social worker, Nzinga. In Palestine, Nur finds “life and love and death and will were packed close.” Abulhawa’s characters’ lives vividly depict resiliency in the face of adversity. (Sept.)
★ 09/15/2015
With the number of refugees worldwide at a record high, this novel is particularly relevant and insightful. Abulhawa (Mornings in Jenin) portrays four generations of women living in a Gaza refugee camp, all desperately trying to make the best of an intolerable situation. Nazmiyeh is the matriarch of this extended family, whose members live together under one roof, struggling to maintain their zest for life in what many would see as a hopeless struggle. The love they share proves to be much stronger than the bombings and vicious attacks they are forced to endure. The author, born to Palestinian refugees of the 1967 war, takes her title from a short poem that recurs throughout the story, summing up the philosophy of this refugee family. VERDICT Beautiful and heartfelt, this precise, vividly written novel is an inspiring choice for discussion groups.—Lisa Rohrbaugh, Leetonia Community P.L., OH
Jennifer Woodward narrates this sprawling story of Palestinian love and loss in subdued tones. She manages capably with the Arabic words peppered throughout the novel, giving her storytelling authenticity and musicality. Her precise rhythm and pace will remind listeners of lyrical poetry readings. Yet, if listened to for long stretches, the consistent narration lacks variation, and the listener’s attention may wander. On the whole, this title will appeal to those interested in historical fiction set in the Middle East. Through the characters, the listener is brought face to face with the decisions of governments and the personal costs they exact from individuals. M.R. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
2015-06-17
Abulhawa (Mornings in Jenin, 2010) mixes magical realism, family melodrama, and politics in her storytelling about several generations of Palestinian women trying to survive in Gaza before and during the Israeli occupation. In 1948, soldiers from the newly established state of Israel attack the village of Beit Daras, raping and killing without remorse. Among those killed is Mariam, an unusually gifted child who has been taught to read and write by her friend Khaled. Mariam's sister, Nazmiyeh, assumes Khaled is imaginary until his picture appears in a photograph. Khaled is somehow reborn or transmitted into Nazmiyeh's grandson Khaled, born in 1998. By then, Nazmiyeh's brother, Mamdouh, has moved to America. His son, Mike, marries a Castilian-American, with whom he has a daughter, Nur. After Mike's death, Mamdouh wins custody of Nur but dies before he can return with her to Gaza. As a child, Nur experiences one travail after another, including an unloving "narcissist" for a mother, sexual abuse, and a string of foster homes. But she makes it through graduate school to become a therapist. Eventually, drawn by her Palestinian roots and her attraction to a Palestinian doctor, Nur ends up in Beit Daras, where she studies the case of a young boy who has fallen into a "coma-like" condition since an Israeli attack. The boy is Khaled, but Nur is at first unaware of their family ties. Nur's personal drama intertwines with not only her family's story, but with all of Gaza's struggle against the Israelis. In italicized sections, Abulhawa not only explains events in the narrative through Khaled's perceptions, but also gives what seems to be her own take on key moments in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. While a folk tale-like spirituality infuses the storytelling, readers' enjoyment will mostly depend on how they react to Abulhawa's violently anti-Israel and slightly milder anti-American perspectives.