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The Way to the Spring

Life and Death in Palestine

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From an award-winning journalist, a brave and necessary immersion into the everyday struggles of Palestinian life 
Over the past three years, American writer Ben Ehrenreich has been traveling to and living in the West Bank, staying with Palestinian families in its largest cities and its smallest villages. Along the way he has written major stories for American outlets, including a remarkable New York Times Magazine cover story. Now comes the powerful new work that has always been his ultimate goal, The Way to the Spring.
We are familiar with brave journalists who travel to bleak or war-torn places on a mission to listen and understand, to gather the stories of people suffering from extremes of oppression and want: Katherine Boo, Ryszard Kapuściński, Ted Conover, and Philip Gourevitch among them. Palestine is, by any measure, whatever one's politics, one such place. Ruled by the Israeli military, set upon and harassed constantly by Israeli settlers who admit unapologetically to wanting to drive them from the land, forced to negotiate an ever more elaborate and more suffocating series of fences, checkpoints, and barriers that have sundered home from field, home from home, this is a population whose living conditions are unique, and indeed hard to imagine. In a great act of bravery, empathy and understanding, Ben Ehrenreich, by placing us in the footsteps of ordinary Palestinians and telling their story with surpassing literary power and grace, makes it impossible for us to turn away.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 4, 2016
      Teeming with heartbreak, irony, and intimate moments of joy, this first nonfiction book from journalist and novelist Ehrenreich (Ether) germinated from his 2013 New York Times Magazine cover story entitled (more provocatively) “Is This Where the Third Intifada Will Start?” For readers perplexed by the Israel-Palestine conflict, he intersperses his story with crash-course history lessons. But the author’s real project is to humanize ordinary Palestinians for Americans, capturing the humiliations and indignities—bureaucratic, psychological, and physical—that they suffer under occupation; their fear, anger, and frustration; and their families and celebrations. He paints a vivid portrait of life in three locations: the village of Nabi Saleh, where families have been protesting weekly for the right to use a spring that was theirs until Israeli settlers claimed it, and are consistently met with force; the city of Hebron, a puzzle box of checkpoints and segregated zones, and a powder keg of Jewish and Palestinian resentments; and the village of Umm al-Kheir, where a way of life is quietly dying in the shadow of ever-expanding settlements. With a journalist’s keen eye for detail and a novelist’s ardor for language and its ability to move people, Ehrenreich will incite renewed compassion in his readers. Agent: Gloria Loomis, Watkins Loomis Agency.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2016
      A devastating portrait of unending turbulence in Palestine.From 2011 to 2014, journalist and novelist Ehrenreich (Ether, 2011, etc.) lived for several extended periods in the West Bank, observing, questioning, and interacting with residents. In a region inflamed by "intractable" oppression and violence, the author aims to tell stories "about resistance, and about people who resist. My concern is with what keeps people going when everything appears to be lost." Acknowledging that objectivity is impossible, Ehrenreich hopes to achieve "something more modest...truth." Revealing truth, though, is hardly a modest goal in a place where contested truths erupt in death and destruction. "There were greater and lesser sorrows," writes the author, "but sorrow was a given. So was the pain of humiliation, the hard pride of refusal, a certain rage." In Nabi Saleh, Hebron, Ramallah, and other towns, the author focuses on individuals engaged in protest and grass-roots resistance efforts against Israel's "almost complete control over the Palestinian economy," settlers' determination to take over land, arbitrary rules and controls, and a pervasive atmosphere of fear. Israeli soldiers attack Palestinians with rubber bullets, Molotov cocktails, a fetid spray, and tear gas; settlers throw acid and urine; residents counter with bricks, stones, and rockets that the author characterizes as "unnerving" but, he insists, incapable of causing damage. Hebron struck the author as the most horrific: where it was normal to hear screams from soldiers' beatings; where each day schoolchildren were fired on with tear gas; where people were arrested and detained as "a warning"; where streets were laden with "trash, bottles, bricks, and concrete blocks." Ehrenreich has no faith in American-led peace talks and castigates Benjamin Netanyahu for "near-constant deception, insult, and bad faith" and for fomenting "fear and rage." Although Ehrenreich feels optimistic about the determination of Palestinians to resist, this visceral book, sorrowfully, portends no end to the horror.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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