![Between Two Deserts](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
![Between Two Deserts](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
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Between Two Deserts
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- 3,49 €
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- 3,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Jerusalem lies at the end of an ancient Roman road, a city swathed in light and sorrow. Coming to Jerusalem to fulfill her grandfather's dying wish, Eve Cavell finds herself poised on the seam of three worlds — Muslim, Christian, and Jewish. Inspired rather than frightened by the ghosts and warring children that surround her, Eve emerges from mourning to a life larger for its dangers. The lost and alone — an Australian street preacher; a handsome apathetic Palestinian; an alienated Israeli investigator; and others — beat a path to her door. Soon she attracts the attention of Mozes Koenig, an elderly Hungarian author in search of a heroine. Eve, with her lodestar eyes and solitary dance, captivates the old man's imagination, and together they create an opus to humanity in a city made of stone.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Modern-day Jerusalem may seem an unlikely setting for romance especially between a Muslim man and Jewish woman but many improbable liaisons blossom in this promising first novel. The protagonist, Eve Cavell, is an American whose blundering presence in Jerusalem is deftly woven into a plot with many separate intrigues. Eve travels to Israel to fulfill the dying wish of her grandfather, but she initially has no interest in the region's complex political landscape, despite her Jewish heritage. From the moment she arrives, Eve's ignorance of the land's social customs wins her the wrong sort of attention from Israeli authorities. First, she rents a room in the forbidden Arab quarter and, as if to draw even more scrutiny, she takes a young Palestinian man, Salim, as her lover. Eve's situation is further complicated when she gets involved with a woman who runs an orphanage with connections to the PLO. Shames, a former Middle East correspondent, handles the complexities of Eve's visit to war-torn Jerusalem with a subtlety seldom seen in this genre. She is careful not to pass judgment on either side of the political equation as she skillfully intertwines the lives of this diverse cast of characters to produce a tightly executed, emotion-filled work. Shames avoids the temptation of offering trite reflections on the region's ongoing conflict and shuns the sort of moralizing that might have marred her sensual prose, making this streamlined debut a timely book of modest beauty.