Embrace on Brooklyn Bridge
A Novel
Ezzedine C Fishere author John Peate translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The American University in Cairo Press
Published:2nd Mar '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A rich and sensitive novel about loss and alienation, about life lived in exile, and about the search for home, shortlisted for the Arabic Booker
On the eve of Salma's twenty-first birthday, friends and family travel to New York for a celebration reluctantly organized by her grandfather Darwish. As the guests make their way to the party, each journey takes on a greater significance than a simple trip to the city, as they find themselves examining their pasts, their relationships to one another, and to the country in which they live. Between Cairo and New York, Embrace on Brooklyn Bridge paints a vivid portrait of a fragmented Arab-American family, one struggling to become whole again and to let go of the past.
"Embrace on Brooklyn Bridge is a remarkable novel for its style, its plot, and its reach into the experience of straddling two worlds and two states of being."--Banipal
"Ezzedine Choukri Fishere . . . taking his literary career to new heights."--Egypt Independent
"A beautiful, unique novel."--Gamal al-Ghitani, author of Zayni Barakat
"A deeper view of the world of Arabs abroad . . . [Embrace on Brooklyn Bridge] represents the symbol of Arab immigrants without carrying their usual stereotypical qualities ... Fishere offers no simple solutions to his characters and doesn't try to preach in one way or another, but rather to flash a light on a different dimension and let his heroes do the talking."--Al-Ahram Online
"Fishere's method movingly teases out the spaces between belonging and forced, awkward fits, and the result is certain to endure in the reader's consciousness . . . . [Embrace on Brooklyn Bridge] is "Mrs. Dalloway" for an age when conversations about immigration, particularly from Arab nations, dominate--a gripping portrait of the tenuous spaces that marginalized populations are made to occupy, and a searing examination of the struggle to belong."--Foreword Reviews
ISBN: 9789774168192
Dimensions: 205mm x 130mm x 23mm
Weight: 163g
168 pages