An experimental novel that explores the complexity of Palestinian
identity through extended metaphor and dark humor.
On a plastic chair in a parking lot in Ramallah sits a young man writing
a novel, reflecting on his life: working in a dance club on the Israeli
side of the border, scratching his father's amputated leg, dreaming
nightly of a haunting scorpion, witnessing the powerful aura of his
mountain-lodging aunt. His work in progress is a meditation on absence,
loss, and emptiness. He poses deep questions: What does it mean to
exist? How can you confirm the existence of a place, a person, a limb?
How do we engage with what is no longer there? Absurd at times, raw at
others, The Dance of the Deep-Blue Scorpion explores Palestinian
identity through Akram Musallam's extended metaphors in the hope of
transcending the loss of territory and erasure of history.