Book Descriptions
for Where the Streets Had a Name by Randa Abdel-Fattah
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Thirteen-year-old Hayaat and her Palestinian family have lived in Bethlehem, only six miles from the Old City of Jerusalem, since their family home and olive groves were taken for Israeli settlements years before. Her mother’s frustration, her father’s sadness, boisterous disagreements with her siblings, and an undercurrent of love and humor define Hayaat’s life. So, too, do uncertainties, from sudden curfews to the unpredictability of violence. When her grandmother falls ill, Hayatt is determined to bring her a jar of soil from the yard of the Old City home where the elderly woman lived years ago. Traveling with her Palestinian Christian friend Sammy, the six miles there and then back last all the hours of a single day and deep into the night. Journeying by foot, bus, and taxi, around and through checkpoints, sneaking over the city wall, the two meet other Palestinian travelers as well as Jews who are sympathetic and helpful. But the trip also brings back Hayaat’s terrible memories of a blast that left her face scarred and killed a childhood friend several years before. In the days and weeks that follow, Hayaat can’t shake a growing feeling of despair. Author Randa Abdel-Fattah has woven a rich tapestry of a narrative, incorporating eye-opening details of the challenges faced by families like Hayaat’s into a story that illuminates the importance of laughter, love, and above all, hope. (Age 12 and older)
CCBC Choices 2011. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2011. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Hayaat's Palestinian grandmother dreams of returning to her farm in West Jerusalem, long ago occupied by Israeli settlers, and the heartbreak is killing her. In desperation, Hayaat makes the danerous and illegal journey across the towering new Wall that divides the Israeli and Palestinian people to bring back a piece of her family's old home. A story about life under occupation told from the perspective of a Palestinian teenager. It is a story of loss and sacrifice, and of excitement, family relationships, laughter - and of hope. A topical
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.