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Barakat, Ibtisam. Childhood and youth. Juvenile literature.
Barakat, Ibtisam. Childhood and youth.
Children, Palestinian Arab. Biography. Juvenile literature.
Youth, Palestinian Arab. Biography. Juvenile literature.
Girls. Education. Arab countries. Juvenile literature.
Arab-Israeli conflict. Juvenile literature.
Children, Palestinian Arab.
Youth, Palestinian Arab.
Girls. Education. Arab countries.
Arab-Israeli conflict.
In this sequel to Tasting the Sky (2007), a memoir and winner of the Arab American Book Award, Barakat moves beyond her early school years during the Six-Day War and its uprooting aftermath. She focuses on the years 1971 81, when she feisty protofeminist d her family shifted about in the occupied West Bank, trying to find a place that felt safe and like home. This family of seven is financially strapped rakat's father is a truck driver afflicted with narcolepsy, a potentially deadly combination d readers will be astounded at how often they relocate. The through line is Barakat's overwhelming hunger for education, a passion that she eventually shares with her mother, whom she tutors so that they might tackle high school in tandem. The beauty of the writing is its clear-eyed matter-of-factness. Barakat doesn't plead for sympathy (political or emotional); she just recalls, in concrete detail, this particular world as she experienced it as a young woman, and the result is as inspiring as it is engrossing.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In this companion memoir to
Gr 7 Up-An endearing memoir from an acclaimed author. This work picks up after the events of Barakat's previous title, Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood , which left off in 1971. Barakat's lovely, lyrical style depicts an adolescence that will be simultaneously familiar to readers in its universal themes (struggle to become one's own person, family life and its usual squabbles) and very different in its backdrop of 1970s Palestine. The era was rife with political turmoilthe region was still reeling from the Six-Day War in 1967 and the continued fallout. With dreams of becoming a writer, Barakat embarked on a new path. She found encouragement from the adults in her life, especially her mother, who decided she wants an education, too. Barakat's recollections of her mother's educational pursuits are especially poignant. She reflects on her mother's chafing at the religious and cultural norms that forced her to leave school after the sixth grade and to marry at 15. Barakat wonderfully captures the mood of the time and place once again. At times humorous and heartbreaking, this work will immerse readers in Barakat's experience, leaving them withperhaps—a broadened worldview. VERDICT Highly recommended for upper middle school and high school libraries.— Elaine Baran Black, Georgia Public Library Service, Atlanta
Voice of Youth AdvocatesGrowing up in the 1970s was hard for a young girl in Palestine. Written in five different parts, each chronicling her family's life in different homes, Barakat's memoir highlights what life was like growing up in Israeli-occupied Palestine. This book takes place where Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood (Macmillan, 2007/VOYA June 2007) left off, although it could be a stand-alone novel, starting at second grade and continuing through high school. Beginning only seven months after "Black September," during which thousands of Palestinians living in Jordan were killed after engaging in a battle to regain Palestine from Israel following many years of warring, Barakat intimately shares her story about survival, courage, and learning to never lose one's sense of identity despite the circumstances; she and her family were "made to live with no land, no country, no rights, no safety, and no respect for our dignity." Stories of her father's deep depression over trying to provide for a large family as a truck driver while battling narcolepsy escalates quickly into a darker story as he threatens to attempt suicide and the entire family accompanies him on his daredevil ride, deciding to all die together.Barakat's writing and education take center stage as it is her commitment to these that inspires her mother to return to school and complete her studies. Lyrical and moving, Barakat's first-person, present-tense story catapults the reader into a time when political tensions and the battle for human rights rage on, and the fight, not only for survival, but to have a voice is in full swing. Not to be missed, this memoir is a wonderful additional to any library.Stephanie Wilkes.
ALA Booklist
National Council For Social Studies Notable Children's Trade
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
Wilson's High School Catalog
From award-winning Palestinian author Ibtisam Barakat comes a touching account of coming of age against a backdrop of political turmoil in the Middle East. Picking up where Ibtisam Barakat's first memoir, Tasting the Sky, left off, Balcony on the Moon follows her through her childhood and adolescence in Palestine from 1972-1981 in the aftermath of the Six-Day War. This memoir about pursuing dreams in the face of adversity chronicles Ibitsam's desire to be a writer and shows how she finds inspiration through writing letters to pen pals and from an adult who encourages her to keep at it. But the most surprising turn of all for Ibtisam happens when her mother decides that she would like to seek out an education, too. Enlightening and at times funny, Balcony on the Moon is a not often depicted look at daily life in a politically tumultuous region. A Margaret Ferguson Book Praise for Balcony on the Moon : "This is a compelling personal history, brimming with humor, wisdom, and empathy." -- Publishers Weekly , starred review "This intense memoir paints a dark picture of growing up in Israeli-occupied Palestine, where 'we are made to live with no land, no country, no rights, no safety, and no respect for our dignity.' . . . A poetic, deeply felt coming-of-age story." -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review "[A] memoir and winner of the Arab American Book Award, Barakat moves beyond her early school years during the Six-Day War and its uprooting aftermath. She focuses on the years 1971-81, when she--a feisty protofeminist--and her family shifted about in the occupied West Bank, trying to find a place that felt safe and like home. . . The beauty of the writing is its clear-eyed matter-of-fact-ness." -- Booklist "Highly recommended for upper middle school and high school libraries." -- School Library Journal