CaseyTheCanadianLesbrarian's Reviews > The Philistine
The Philistine
by
by
CaseyTheCanadianLesbrarian's review
bookshelves: fiction, canadian, poc-canlesbrarian, east-coast, montreal, arab, queer, reading-in-colour, own, bisexual-pansexual
Jun 01, 2020
bookshelves: fiction, canadian, poc-canlesbrarian, east-coast, montreal, arab, queer, reading-in-colour, own, bisexual-pansexual
This book didn't draw me in right away, but it eventually won me over, hard. It's an #OwnVoices story about Nadia, a queer Palestinian-Canadian woman who travels to Egypt in the late 1980s to track down her father whom she has not seen in years. She finds and gets to know him anew, but she also meets and falls in love with an Egyptian woman artist, Manal.
There's a wonderful journey of Nadia reconnecting with her Palestinian heritage, as she meets many other Palestinians (taxi drivers, booksellers, a doctor) who don't hesitate to accept her as Palestinian and reach out to connect. Nadia is humbled and rejuvenated. There is of course also her father, whom she slowly begins to see as a flawed adult human being, instead of only the father who has disappointed her.
The story is set mostly in Cairo, which is a complicated, contradictory character unto itself. I have never been there, but the city really came alive in my mind as I read this book. The beauty of the art, food, generosity of people, poverty, stink of animals and defecation in the street, chaotic traffic, all the details of everyday life in Cairo. Manal is Nadia's guide as well as for the reader, and she is a passionate, opinionated, and lively one. I loved her.
Beautiful writing; thoughtful, nuanced content about art, family, conencting with your heritage, Palestinian and Egyptian cultures and politics, Arabic language, and the generosityof strangers. I really loved this book, and am sad it sat on my shelf for over a year before I finally read it!
Full review on my blog!
There's a wonderful journey of Nadia reconnecting with her Palestinian heritage, as she meets many other Palestinians (taxi drivers, booksellers, a doctor) who don't hesitate to accept her as Palestinian and reach out to connect. Nadia is humbled and rejuvenated. There is of course also her father, whom she slowly begins to see as a flawed adult human being, instead of only the father who has disappointed her.
The story is set mostly in Cairo, which is a complicated, contradictory character unto itself. I have never been there, but the city really came alive in my mind as I read this book. The beauty of the art, food, generosity of people, poverty, stink of animals and defecation in the street, chaotic traffic, all the details of everyday life in Cairo. Manal is Nadia's guide as well as for the reader, and she is a passionate, opinionated, and lively one. I loved her.
Beautiful writing; thoughtful, nuanced content about art, family, conencting with your heritage, Palestinian and Egyptian cultures and politics, Arabic language, and the generosityof strangers. I really loved this book, and am sad it sat on my shelf for over a year before I finally read it!
Full review on my blog!
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Reading Progress
October 2, 2018
– Shelved
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
to-read
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
fiction
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
canadian
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
poc-canlesbrarian
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
east-coast
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
montreal
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
arab
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
queer
October 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
reading-in-colour
January 5, 2019
– Shelved as:
own
May 28, 2020
–
Started Reading
May 28, 2020
– Shelved as:
bisexual-pansexual
May 30, 2020
–
31.25%
""Then Manal's lips were on hers, lightly, like a corner of fabric that had been flapping in the wind but now was finally settled...
'Nadia, is it true?' Manal's voice was soft, tentative.
'Is what true?'
'Did I kidnap you and make you mine?'""
page
100
'Nadia, is it true?' Manal's voice was soft, tentative.
'Is what true?'
'Did I kidnap you and make you mine?'""
May 30, 2020
–
33.44%
""Peace takes work, too much work for a nice woman like you. Peace is not the same as peace and quiet. One comes after war, the other pretends there is no war."
.
This feels particularly relevant this week. #BlackLivesMatter"
page
107
.
This feels particularly relevant this week. #BlackLivesMatter"
June 1, 2020
–
Finished Reading