Nada A. Jarrar Nada A. Jarrar i(A80830 works by) (a.k.a. Nada Awar Jarrar)
Gender: Female
Heritage: Lebanese
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BiographyHistory

Jarrar has a Lebanese father and an Australian mother. She has lived in London, Paris, Sydney, Washington DC and Beirut.

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon A Good Land London : HarperCollins Australia , 2009 Z1670052 2009 single work novel

'The old neighbourhood block in Beirut was home to an ever-changing population as the fighting intensified and lessened. But three people were almost always there. The older Polish woman, Margo, refugee from her past, her country and family after another war, spinning her tales of freedom fighters, itinerant peoples, despair and courage. And Lebanese born and bred Layla, only recently returned from Australia after fleeing the earlier civil war to teach her students again. Palestinian Kamal; refugee, writer and lecturer, whose cherished faith in a free, tolerant, democratic Lebanon has been shattered by difficulties of living there now. Among their friends are older politicians, university friends often visiting from lucrative posts in Europe or the USA, and local political activists.

The retaliation raids by Israel and the political aftermath further shatter their community: some flee to the mountains, many leave the country. Some like Layla try to identify more deeply what it is that holds her to this place, why she cannot leave.

Nada Awar Jarrar has written a powerful and moving novel, full of character and insight, of joy and tears, which makes us understand how people can stand such daily fear of violence and can continue to have faith in the country of their heart.' (From the publisher's website.)

2010 shortlisted South East Asia and South Pacific Region Best Book
y separately published work icon Somewhere, Home London : Heinemann , 2003 Z1100524 2003 single work novel A moving novel about modern Lebanon, this story intermingles the lives of three women and explores their reactions to war, loss, displacement, exile and return to the homeland. This is Nada A. Jarrar's first novel.
2004 winner South East Asia and South Pacific Region Best First Book
2004 winner Commonwealth Writers Prize Best First Book
Last amended 28 Apr 2010 14:58:36
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