Onze bestsellers
Skin, Tooth, and Bone
€30,00Skin, Tooth, and Bone: The Basis of Movement is Our People
-OPBRENGST GAAT NAAR SINS INVALID–
The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House
€3,50The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House. Klein maar fijn. Dit beroemde betoog zou iedereen gelezen moeten hebben.
It’s Not About the Burqa
€12,75It’s Not About the Burqa : Muslim Women on Faith, Feminism, Sexuality and Race
Feministische fictie
The Lack of Light
€23,00A page-turning epic of loss and redemption about four women who formed a deep friendship in the turbulent years leading up to and after Georgia’s independence from the Soviet Union.
Boulder
€14,50A chronicle of queer voices navigating a hostile world – and in prose as brittle and beautiful as an ancient saga.
Pomegranate
€12,50A fierce story about a queer Black woman working to stay clean, pull her life together, and heal after being released from prison.
Mornings in Jenin
Mornings in Jenin is a multi-generational story about a Palestinian family. Forcibly removed from the olive-farming village of Ein Hod by the newly formed state of Israel in 1948, the Abulhejos are displaced to live in canvas tents in the Jenin refugee camp. We follow the Abulhejo family as they live through a half century of violent history. Amidst the loss and fear, hatred and pain, as their tents are replaced by more forebodingly permanent cinderblock huts, there is always the waiting, waiting to return to a lost home.
The novel’s voice is that of Amal, the granddaughter of the old village patriarch, a bright, sensitive girl who makes it out of the camps, only to return years later, to marry and bear a child. Through her eyes, with her evolving vision, we get the story of her brothers, one who is kidnapped to be raised Jewish, one who will end with bombs strapped to his middle. But of the many interwoven stories, stretching backward and forward in time, none is more important than Amal’s own. Her story is one of love and loss, of childhood and marriage and parenthood, and finally the need to share her history with her daughter, to preserve the greatest love she has.
Set against one of the twentieth century’s most intractable political conflicts, now escalated in a full-scale genocide, Mornings in Jenin is a deeply human novel – a novel of history, identity, friendship, love, terrorism, surrender, courage, and hope. Its power forces us to take a fresh look at one of the defining conflicts of our lifetimes.
