A Thousand Farewells

A Thousand Farewells
Author: Nahlah Ayed
Publsiher: Penguin Canada
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2012-04-10
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780143184034

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A uniquely personal insight into the Middle East from one of Canada's most respected foreign correspondents In 1976, Nahlah Ayed's family gave up their comfortable life in Winnipeg for the squalor of a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman, Jordan. The transition was jarring, but it was from this uncomfortable situation that Ayed first observed the people whose heritage she shared. The family returned to Canada when she was thirteen, and Ayed ignored the Middle East for many years. But the First Gulf War and the events of 9/11 reignited her interest. Soon she was reporting from the region full-time, trying to make sense of the wars and upheavals that have affected its people and sent so many of them seeking a better life elsewhere. In A Thousand Farewells, Ayed describes with sympathy and insight the myriad ways in which the Arab people have fought against oppression and loss as seen from her own early days witnessing protests in Amman, and the wars, crackdowns, and uprisings she has reported on in countries across the region. This is the heartfelt and personal chronicle of a journalist who has devoted much of her career to covering one of the world's most vexing regions.

A Thousand Farewells

A Thousand Farewells
Author: Nahlah Ayed
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Ayed, Nahlah
ISBN: 0670069094

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Nahlah Ayad tells the story of her childhood, both in Canada and in a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman, Jordan, and how those experiences led her to being a foreign correspondent in the Middle East. She brings unique insight to the events she covered as a journalist for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

A Farewell to Arms

A Farewell to Arms
Author: Ernest Hemingway
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2014-07-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781476764528

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An unforgettable World War I story of an American ambulance driver on the Italian front and his love for an English nurse.

Autumn Light

Autumn Light
Author: Pico Iyer
Publsiher: Vintage
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2019-04-16
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9780451493941

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Returning to his longtime home in Japan after his father-in-law’s sudden death, Pico Iyer picks up the steadying patterns of his everyday rites: going to the post office and engaging in furious games of ping-pong every evening. But in a country whose calendar is marked with occasions honoring the dead, he comes to reflect on changelessness in ways that anyone can relate to: parents age, children scatter, and Iyer and his wife turn to whatever can sustain them as everything falls away. As the maple leaves begin to turn and the heat begins to soften, Iyer shows us a Japan we have seldom seen before, where the transparent and the mysterious are held in a delicate balance, and where autumn reminds us to take nothing for granted.

Out of the Sun

Out of the Sun
Author: Esi Edugyan
Publsiher: House of Anansi
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2021-09-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781487009885

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An insightful exploration and moving meditation on identity, art, and belonging from one of the most celebrated writers of the last decade. What happens when we begin to consider stories at the margins, when we grant them centrality? How does that complicate our certainties about who we are, as individuals, as nations, as human beings? Through the lens of visual art, literature, film, and the author’s lived experience, Out of the Sun examines Black histories in art, offering new perspectives to challenge us. In this groundbreaking, reflective, and erudite book, two-time Scotiabank Giller Prize winner and internationally bestselling author Esi Edugyan illuminates myriad varieties of Black experience in global culture and history. Edugyan combines storytelling with analyses of contemporary events and her own personal story in this dazzling first major work of non-fiction.

Ilustrado

Ilustrado
Author: Miguel Syjuco
Publsiher: Penguin Canada
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2010-05-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780143176831

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Miguel Syjuco's debut novel, Ilustrado, opens with Crispin Salvador, lion of Philippine letters, dead in the Hudson River. His young student, Miguel, sets out to investigate the author's fatal departure from his encroaching obscurity and the suspicious disappearance of an unfinished manuscript—a work that had been planned to not just return the once-great author to fame, but to expose the corruption behind rich families who have ruled the Philippines for generations. To understand the death, Miguel scours the life, charting Salvador's trajectory via his poetry, stories, interviews, novels, polemics, and memoirs. The literary fragments become patterns become stories become epic: a family saga of four generations tracing 150 years of a country's history forged under the Spanish, Americans, and Filipinos themselves. In the end, the story twists, belonging to young Miguel as much as his lost mentor, and readers are treated to an unhindered view of a tropical Third World society caught between reckless decay and hopeful progress. In this astonishingly inventive and bold novel, Syjuco explores fatherhood, regret, revolution, and the mysteries of lives lived and abandoned.

A Thousand Splendid Suns

A Thousand Splendid Suns
Author: Khaled Hosseini
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 380
Release: 2008-09-18
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780747585893

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A riveting and powerful story of an unforgiving time, an unlikely friendship and an indestructible love

Chronicles of Consensual Times

Chronicles of Consensual Times
Author: Jacques Rancière
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 167
Release: 2010-06-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781441122018

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In this fascinating collection, Jacques Ranciere, one of the world's most important and influential living philosophers, explores the nature of consensus in contemporary politics. Consensus does not mean peace. Instead it refers to a map of operations of war, of a topography of the visible, of what is possible and what can be thought, in which war and peace live side-by-side. Lying at the heart of these consensual times are new forms of racism and ethnic cleansing, humanitarian wars and wars against terror. Consensus also implies using time in a way that sees in it a thousand devious turns. This is evident in the incessant diagnoses of the present and of amnesiac politics, in the farewells to the past, the commemorations, and the calls to remember. But all these twists and turns tend toward the same goal: to show that there is only one reality to which we are obliged to consent. What stands in the way of this undertaking is politics. These chronicles aim to re-open that space wherein politics once more becomes thinkable.