The Orange Grove
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3.5 • 4 Ratings
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- $17.99
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
“A finely sculpted gem . . . Possibly the best novel to come from Quebec in 2013.”—Elle
“A fluid and disturbing fable . . . Subtle and extraordinary.”—La Presse
“An essential book.”—Chatelaine
In an unnamed and war-torn country, twin brothers Amed and Aziz live in the sanctuary of the family’s orange grove. But when a bomb comes from “the other side of the mountain” and kills their grandparents, their father must choose how best to avenge his parents’ death, with tragic and unforeseen consequences.
Morally complex and completely unforgettable, Larry Tremblay’s bestselling The Orange Grove offers up a tragic fable about the absurd logic of terrorism, the power of brotherly love, and the hope for peace in a broken world.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Readers will be uncomfortably stirred by this poignant novel about the haunting effects of war from Tremblay, a prolific Montreal actor, playwright, and author of over 30 books. Aziz and Amed are nine-year-old identical twins growing up in the war-torn Arab Middle East (their exact location left intentionally vague by the author) at their family's orange grove. When a bomb kills the boys' grandparents, a religious militant faction convinces their father, Zahed, that "revenge is the only answer for your grief." Zahed is given a belt of explosives and told to choose one of his sons to send on a suicide-bombing mission. In an act of desperation, their distraught mother tries to switch the boys' identities, leading to a tragic event that dishonors their family in the eyes of the militants and their religious community. A decade later, the surviving twin, plagued by regret and despair, builds a new life as an actor in Montreal, trying to find reason in art. This is a tale of the innumerable tragedies of war bereavement, brainwashing, aftermath told with the lyricism of an epic parable or fairytale, one the reader will not soon forget.
Customer Reviews
Stranger
This is a story of forgiveness. A story of misunderstanding. A story of indentity. A story of brotherhood. It is a beautiful and brutal and honest glimpse into the things we only claim to understand.