A stirring story of love discovered in unexpected places, growing us
beyond who we thought we were--or imagined we could become
Summer, 1981--Following the death of her father, Becky Klein, an
adventurous, naive young woman from the Midwest, sets out for the Middle
East, in search of her Jewish roots. She discovers something more, in a
Gaza garden near a refugee camp by the sea. There she befriends the
garden's owner, a Palestinian activist who has served time in Israeli
jails. As their relationship grows, Rebecca finds herself drawn into a
story of roots unlike the one she had imagined.
The West Bank, Cairo, Yarmouk, Benghazi--before long, their romance
careens across a region in flames, child in tow, wrestling with
conflicting maps of love, family and home.
Moving, yet brimming with flashes of humor, Alison Glick's tangle with
the search for purpose and commitment yields a bracing, radiant story
for these times.