Soon to be a major motion picture from award-winning director Eran Kolirin In his searing new novel, the young Arab-Israeli writer Sayed Kashua introduces a disillusioned journalist who returns to his hometown, an Arab village within Israel, hoping to reclaim the simplicity of life among kin.
As the situation grows in.
But when Israeli tanks surround the village without warning or explanation, everyone inside is cut off from the outside world.
Hoping to reclaim the simplicity of life among kin, the prodigal son returns home to find that nothing is as he remembers: everything is smaller, the people are petty and provincial.
In his searing new novel, a young Arab journalist returns to his hometown an Arab village within Israel where his already vexed sense of belonging is forced to crisis when the village becomes a pawn in the never-ending power struggle that is the Middle East.
In his debut, Dancing Arabs, Sayed Kashua established himself as one of the most daring voices of the Middle East.
As the situation grows increasingly dire, the village devolves into a Darwinian jungle, where paranoia quickly takes hold and threatens the community\'s fragile equilibrium.
But when Israeli tanks surround the village without warning or explanation, everyone inside is cut off from the outside world.
Hoping to reclaim the simplicity of life among kin, the prodigal son returns home to find that nothing is as he remembers: everything is smaller, the people are petty and provincial.
In his searing new novel, a young Arab journalist returns to his hometown an Arab village within Israel where his already vexed sense of belonging is forced to crisis when the village becomes a pawn in the never-ending power struggle that is the Middle East.
In his debut, Dancing Arabs, Sayed Kashua established himself as one of the most daring voices of the Middle East.
With the enduring moral and literary power of Albert Camus and George Orwell, Let It Be Morning proves Sayed Kashua to be a fearless, prophetic observer of a political and human quagmire that offers no easy answers.
When Israeli tanks surround the village without explanation, the community devolves into a Darwinian jungle, and the journalist and his family must negotiate the fault lines of a world on the brink of implosion.
But the prodigal son returns to a place where the people are petty and provincial and everything is smaller than he remembers.
Soon to be a major motion picture from award-winning director Eran Kolirin In his searing new novel, the young Arab-Israeli writer Sayed Kashua introduces a disillusioned journalist who returns to his hometown, an Arab village within Israel, hoping to reclaim the simplicity of life among kin