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Overview
Interspersed with evocative Arab fables, these vibrant stories explore the differences between Middle Eastern and Western culture, between immigrant parents and their native-born children, and between new lives and old memories. Through interwoven narrative and allegories, a timely picture of Middle Eastern immigrants and refugees emerges. Poignant vignettes about those still living in war-torn Palestine and Iraq create a contrasting perspective. In a time of suspicion and fear, this exquisite volume paints a humanizing picture of Arabic culture and a sympathetic portrait of Middle Easterners struggling to find their place.
Editorials
Kirkus Reviews
Fifteen elegant tales about the Arab emigre experience in Australia, courtesy of the Down Under continent's Sallis (The City of Sealions, p. 145). While the collection tracks an Australian's immersion in Arab Yemeni culture, the pieces mostly concern the Lebanese community's often-uneasy fit within Australian society. In three parts, corresponding to groupings of families, Sallis explores the ancient ties to family and culture that unite and haunt these emigres. In the first story, an allegory for the startling collision between Australian and Arab cultures, a gigantic kangaroo attacks the car of a family on excursion in the Riverland country. Enraged as her husband Amin is battered by the beast, the wife, Zein, gets out and pommels the animal to death with her patent-leather stilettos while shouting, "God is great!" Eventually, and often unfortunately for the preservation of the family as a tightly knit unit, the emigres begin to adapt to Australian society, as in "Ibtisam Had Four Sons," about a matriarch, Ibtisam, who can't quite keep track of all the goings-on of her wildly assimilated children-all they do is deposit news of divorces and ill-begotten pregnancies. In "Music," the groom's mother, Zein, rues the marriage of her son to a plain Australian girl whose family eyes the Arabs suspiciously, and yet she finds a redemptive moment watching the "secret, strengthening gift" of love pass between the newlyweds. Several pieces treat a rich local folklore, like "The Jackal," a chilling dramatization of the saying that a jackal can drag and bury the body of a man. By the third part, Sallis begins introducing political overtones in stories dealing with Iraqis fleeing from Americanbombings, and Arab stone-throwers being hunted down savagely in Palestine. These latter tales are heavily weighted, though harrowing, and lack the intricate delineation of the earlier ones. Altogether, an unusual and never uninteresting literary niche.Book Details
Published
March 21, 2005
Publisher
Allen & Unwin Australia
Pages
180
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781741140712