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The Wrong End of the Telescope

Original price was: $17.00.Current price is: $12.75.

Rated 5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

WINNER OF THE 2022 PEN/FAULKNER AWARD FOR FICTION

SKU EBP-1888624 Categories , Tag
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WINNER OF THE 2022 PEN/FAULKNER AWARD FOR FICTIONBy National Book Award and the National Book Critics’ Circle Award finalist for An Unnecessary Woman, Rabih Alameddine, comes a transporting new novel about an Arab American trans woman’s journey among Syrian refugees on Lesbos island.
Mina Simpson, a Lebanese doctor, arrives at the infamous Moria refugee camp on Lesbos, Greece, after being urgently summoned for help by her friend who runs an NGO there. Alienated from her family except for her beloved brother, Mina has avoided being so close to her homeland for decades. But with a week off work and apart from her wife of thirty years, Mina hopes to accomplish something meaningful, among the abundance of Western volunteers who pose for selfies with beached dinghies and the camp’s children. Soon, a boat crosses bringing Sumaiya, a fiercely resolute Syrian matriarch with terminal liver cancer. Determined to protect her children and husband at all costs, Sumaiya refuses to alert her family to her diagnosis. Bonded together by Sumaiya’s secret, a deep connection sparks between the two women, and as Mina prepares a course of treatment with the limited resources on hand, she confronts the circumstances of the migrants’ displacement, as well as her own constraints in helping them.
Not since the inimitable Aaliya of An Unnecessary Woman has Rabih Alameddine conjured such a winsome heroine to lead us to one of the most wrenching conflicts of our time. Cunningly weaving in stories of other refugees into Mina’s singular own, The Wrong End of the Telescope is a bedazzling tapestry of both tragic and amusing portraits of indomitable spirits facing a humanitarian crisis.

About Author

Rabih Alameddine (Arabic: ربيع علم الدين‎) was born in Amman, Jordan to Lebanese parents, and grew up in Kuwait and Lebanon. He was educated in England and America, and has an engineerin

Author

Rabih Alameddine

Format

Ebook

ISBN

9780802157829

Language

English

Pages

518

Publication Date

09-17-2021

Publisher

Grove Press

1 review for The Wrong End of the Telescope

  1. Rated 5 out of 5

    vdvd (verified owner)

    This is a swirling, Sebald-esque narrative set in the refugee camps of Lesbos. The narrator is Mina, a doctor of Lebanese origin, volunteering at Lesbos, and the perspective shifts from her accounts of arrivals at Lesbos, their varying experiences and her personal experiences as well, of leaving Lebanon before the civil war, her estrangement from her parents on her transitioning. was Alameddine beautifully weaves in Greek myth, obviously ,from the setting, drawing analogies to modern-day wars and refugee crises There are two particularly beautiful chapters on Icarus as the first documented emigrant and his tragic end in the sea now named after him-a sea so many still cross , some to their peril, and a stunningly well-written chapter on the story of Arion and the dolphin. It’s a deeply disturbing and moving book.
    Alameddine is clearly trying to work through his feelings of guilt of being a privileged writer chronicling these people’s stories of pain and trauma, and finding no way of handling that, decides to palm that off to the reader, and so you get multiple passages where various characters castigate the readers of the books as privileged Chardonnay-swilling liberals who will forget this in a few minutes. Of course I’m privileged, most people reading the book are, but so is the author, and readers can equally accuse the author of worse, profiting off other people’s pain. Also knocking off a star for the Madonna dichotomy all the women characters fall into.

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