The Day Nina Simone Stopped Singing
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- 9,99 €
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- 9,99 €
Publisher Description
The Homeland actress’s “recollections of her unconventional youth in war-torn Beirut are heartbreaking yet humorous . . . in this unique” memoir (Publishers Weekly).
Raised in 1970s Lebanon on Charles Baudelaire, A Clockwork Orange, and fine Bordeaux, Darina Al-Joundi was encouraged by her unconventional father to defy all taboos. She spent her adolescence defying death in Beirut nightclubs as bombs fell across the city. The more oppressive the country became, the more drugs and anonymous sex she had, fueling the resentment directed at her daily by the same men who would spend the night with her.
As the war dies down, she begins to incur the consequences of her lifestyle. On his deathbed, her father’s last wish is for his favorite song, “Sinnerman” by Nina Simone, to be played at his funeral instead of the traditional suras of the Koran. When she does just that, the final act of defiance elicits a catastrophic response from her surviving family members.
In this dramatic true story, Darina Al-Joundi is defiantly passionate about living her life as a liberated woman, even if it means leaving everyone and everything behind in this “beautifully taut and relentlessly unemotional” memoir (Kirkus).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Actress Al-Joundi's recollections of her unconventional youth in war-torn Beirut are heartbreaking yet humorous. The daughter of a Syrian father who insisted his child not be held back by the traditional limitations imposed on women in the Middle East, Al-Joundi was encouraged to be independent. Her father refused to "label" his children as Muslim or Christian, telling Al-Joundi that she should choose for herself, but to never bow down to anyone. Al-Joundi was seven when the war in Lebanon began in 1975. Her family moved constantly, returning to Beirut whenever possible, and Al-Joundi joined the Red Cross as a nurse. "Hungry for everything, for sex, drugs, alcohol," she developed a cocaine habit, and it was only after her father's funeral he insisted Nina Simone be played instead of readings from the Qur'an that Al-Joundi ran afoul of other family members and was involuntarily committed; she soon realized that Beirut was no longer for her and moved to France. With her direct prose, Al-Joundi never wallows in the horrors or overplays the absurdity, instead striking a perfect balance in this unique account.