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Product Information
ISBN: 0375423796
Publisher: Pantheon
Age Group: Adult
Pages: 271
Weight: 450 g
Dimensions: 14 x 21 x 1.9 cm
Book Cover: Hard Cover

Sharon and My Mother-in-Law: Ramallah Diaries: English 2005

Sharon and My Mother-in-Law: Ramallah Diaries

Author: Suad Amiry
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27.82 $
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Product Information
ISBN: 0375423796
Publisher: Pantheon
Age Group: Adult
Pages: 271
Weight: 450 g
Dimensions: 14 x 21 x 1.9 cm
Book Cover: Hard Cover
(For US customer $23) \Perhaps one day I may forgive you for putting us under curfew for forty-two days, but I will never forgive you for making us live with my mother- in-law for what seemed, then, more like forty-two years.] Irreverent, darkly funny, unexpected, and very unlike any other writing on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Sharon and My Mother-in-Law describes Palestinian architect Suad AmiryYs experience of living in the Occupied Territories. Based on diaries and e-mail correspondence that Amiry kept to maintain her sanity from 1981 to 2004, the book evokes, through a series of vignettes, the frustrations, cabin fever, and downright misery of daily life in the West Bank town of Ramallah, with its curfews, roadblocks, house-to-house searches, and violence. Amiry writes about the enormous difficulty of moving from one place to another, the torture of falling in love with someone from another town, the absurdity of her dog receiving a Jerusalem identity card when thousands of Palestinians could not do so, and the impossibility of acquiring a gas mask from the Israeli Civil Administration during the first Gulf War in 1991. There are also the challenges of shoppi
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(For US customer $23) \Perhaps one day I may forgive you for putting us under curfew for forty-two days, but I will never forgive you for making us live with my mother- in-law for what seemed, then, more like forty-two years.] Irreverent, darkly funny, unexpected, and very unlike any other writing on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Sharon and My Mother-in-Law describes Palestinian architect Suad AmiryYs experience of living in the Occupied Territories. Based on diaries and e-mail correspondence that Amiry kept to maintain her sanity from 1981 to 2004, the book evokes, through a series of vignettes, the frustrations, cabin fever, and downright misery of daily life in the West Bank town of Ramallah, with its curfews, roadblocks, house-to-house searches, and violence. Amiry writes about the enormous difficulty of moving from one place to another, the torture of falling in love with someone from another town, the absurdity of her dog receiving a Jerusalem identity card when thousands of Palestinians could not do so, and the impossibility of acquiring a gas mask from the Israeli Civil Administration during the first Gulf War in 1991. There are also the challenges of shoppi
more