Get our latest book recommendations, author news, competitions, offers, and other information right to your inbox.
Wild Thorns
Table of Contents
About The Book
Product Details
- Publisher: Interlink Books (March 1, 2021)
- Length: 208 pages
- ISBN13: 9781623710798
Browse Related Books
Raves and Reviews
"A vivid depiction of life in the West Bank during the first decade of the Israeli occupation....The difficulties and hazards faced by these workers are poignantly portrayed...The author succeeds quite well in conveying the tension and inquietude of daily life in the territories...she also evokes the irrepressible and indomitable spirit of Nablus and its people."
"An earnest Arabic novel, first published in 1976, that dramatizes the reactions of Palestinian nationalists to Israeli occupation of the West Bank, an action that has turned many of their countrymen into nomads dutifully commuting to alien territory to work ( . . . the people had become soft, been brainwashed with lies and Israeli cash). Khalifeh's initial focus on Usama, a young Palestinian returned home to find his relatives compromised in this way, yields to more diffused depictions of several other characters with whom he finds himself conspiring to blow up buses transporting day-workers. The conspiracy raises havoc with the story's formal unity but does enable it to portray credibly a troubling spectrum of understandably extreme responses to disenfranchisement and oppression."
"Her characters are so real you can actually relate to them by mistaking them for someone you know "
"Sahar Khalifeh is the Virginia Wolf of Palestinian literature."
"A representative voice of Arab literature"
"The one Arab novelist who has written one novel after another to show the inseparability of feminist issues form social and political concern is the Palestinian novelist Sahar Khalifeh, whom I consider the best Arab woman novelist in the twentieth century."
– Dr. Bouthaina Shaaban
Resources and Downloads
High Resolution Images
- Book Cover Image (jpg): Wild Thorns eBook 9781623710798