Description
Book SynopsisImagine your own home surrounded by roadblocks and tanks, your water turned off and the cashpoints empty. What would you do next?
A young journalist, recently married with a new baby, is seeking a quieter life away from the city and has bought a large new house in his parent's hometown, an Arab village in Israel. Nothing is as they remember: everything is smaller, the people petty and provincial and the villagers divided between sympathy for the Palestinians and dependence on the Israelis.
Suddenly and shockingly, the village becomes a pawn in the power struggles of the Middle East. When Israeli tanks surround the village without warning or explanation, everyone inside is cut off from the outside world. As the situation grows increasingly tense, our hero is forced to confront what it means to be human in an inhuman situation.
Trade Review'In Let It Be Morning... the text is rendered quite beautifully and the absurdity of the events [Kashua] describes so unflinchingly brings to mind Kafka - another writer caught in a linguistic and national crossfire.' (Laila Lalami, Boston Review)
'At times uproariously funny, at others wrenchingly poignant... Let It Be Morning is as much about humiliation, disappointment, fear, hope and fleeting moments of euphoric possibility as it is about Middle East politics.' (Kaelen Wilson-Goldie, Daily Star)
'Sharp, powerful and uncompromising... one of the most potent and impressive novels written in Hebrew in the last several years.'
* Ha'aretz (Israel) *