Book description
In Baghdad , Lina is trying to lead a normal life, but politics
keep intruding. Violent government coups are almost annual events and
it's difficult for a child to understand what's going on or who to
believe. The need for secrecy means Lina cannot tell her best friend
that they are just waiting for the right moment to flee. It is the
1960s and Lina is part of the dwindling Jewish community Mona Yahia
was born in Baghdad in 1954 and escaped with her family to Israel in
1970. In 1985 she moved to Germany to study fine arts and has remained
there ever since. Winner of the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Prize for
Fiction 2001 Â Yahia rolls Baghdad around her tongue, savouring its
suks, smells, and sweetmeats (reading her makes one hungry). This is a
truly exotic novel, but it's also a coming-of-age work in which the
almost imperceptible transformation from childhood to adolescence is
saltily observed and never sentimentalised. Yahia's prose courses with
insight and wit. Her deftness of touch means that, despite its
subject-matter, this novel never becomes a bleak tale of religious
persecution, but remains a fresh story about adolescent experience in
adversity Â- with parallels in the most unlikely places.' Anne Karpf,
The Guardian  The novel powerfully conveys the author's outrage, as
well as her nostalgia for her native land.' The Times  Yahia's
writing evokes both the sensuality of domestic intimacy alongside the
horror of public hangings When the Grey Beetles Took Over Baghdad is
most politically sophisticated, and also most poignant, when it
explores questions of language and identity.' Alev Adil, Times
Literary Supplement