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A woman, exhausted by work and motherhood, hires the services of a
sinister firm that promises her a brand-new life... Journeying
across America to make a claim to an inheritance, a man must
confront the shame and bigotry that has haunted his family for
generations... A picture-perfect holiday threatens to unravel as
two daughters come to terms with the uneasy dynamic of their new
blended family... The stories shortlisted for the 2022 BBC National
Short Story Award with Cambridge University take readers on a
journey through uncertain terrain: times and places at once
familiar yet deeply unsettling. From the queer love story
unravelling against a desolate and disease-ravaged landscape, to a
man's earnest hunt for the killer of a boy who died in his arms,
these stories are about outsiders, who seek safety and security in
worlds that are chaotic, unfathomable, sometimes beautiful, and
often brutal.
As the Egyptian revolution unfolded throughout 2011 and the ensuing
years, no one was better positioned to comment on it - and try to
push it in productive directions - than best-selling novelist and
political commentator Alba Al Aswany. For years a leading critic of
the Mubarak regime, Al Aswany used his weekly newspaper column for
Al-Masry Al-Youm to propound the revolution's ideals and to
confront the increasingly troubled politics of its aftermath. This
book presents, for the first time in English, all of Al Aswany's
columns from the period, a comprehensive account of the turmoil of
the post-revolutionary years, and a portrait of a country and a
people in flux. Each column is presented along with a context -
setting introduction, as well as notes and a glossary, all designed
to give non-Egyptian readers the background they need to understand
the events and figures that Al Aswany chronicles. The result is a
definitive portrait of Egypt today - how it got here, and where it
might be headed.
The history of walls - as a way to keep people in or out - is also
the history of people managing to get around, over and under them.
From the Berlin Wall and the Mexico-US border, to the barbed wire
fences of Bangladesh's refugee camps, the short stories in this
anthology explore the barriers that have sought to divide
communities and nations, and their traumatic effects on people's
lives and histories. At a time when more walls are being built than
are being brought down, All Walls Collapse brings together writing
from across national, ethnic and linguistic borders, challenging
the political impulse to separate and segregate, and celebrating
the role of literature in traversing division.
'To be European,' writes Leila Slimani, 'is to believe that we are,
at once, diverse and united, that the Other is different but
equal.' Despite these high ideals, however, there is a growing
sense that Europe needs to be fixed, or at the least seriously
rethought. The clamour of rising nationalism - alongside widespread
feelings of disenfranchisement - needs to be addressed if the
dreams of social cohesion, European integration, perhaps even
democracy are to be preserved. This anthology brings together 28
acclaimed women writers, artists, scientists and entrepreneurs from
across the continent to offer new perspectives on the future of
Europe, and how it might be rebuilt. Featuring essays, fictions and
short plays, Europa28 asks what it means to be European today and
demonstrates - with clarity and often humour - how women really do
see things differently.
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