REISSUE The title story of Liyana Badr's remarkable collection of three
short novellas interweaves the narratives of three Palestinians, two
women and one man, relating their successive uprootings: from Palestine
in 1948, from Jordan during Black September in 1970, to their final
exile in Beirut. Badr's intensively evocative contrapuntal style allows
the reader to glimpse the joy and despair of these lives rooted in exile
and resistance. There is an attention to detail in these stories that
brings the grand narrative of Palestinian history alive: a horrified
mother spotting a white hair on her baby's head the morning after a
mortar attack in Beirut; a woman hiding a Palestinian resistance
fighter's gun moments before he is picked up by the Jordanian security
police. The final movement of A Balcony over the Fakihani is a deeply
poetic and harrowing account of Israeli air strikes during the 1982
invasion of Lebanon, told from the perspective we so rarely encounter:
that of the disenfranchised people whose courage and suffering cannot
fail to move the readers of this extraordinary book.