Hello, welcome to 3rd quarter OR. The book being discussed here will be In the Country of Men by Hisham Matar. Here is a short introduction to the book.
"Set in 1979, this affecting first novel tells the story of Suleiman, a Libyan boy whose family and friends are targeted as antirevolutionaries by the repressive government of Muammar Qaddafi, known to his people as the Guardian. In this waking nightmare of how the government sows fear, turning its subjects against one another, men are arrested or disappear; one is eliminated in a horrifying public execution before a gleeful stadium crowd-an event broadcast live on television. Only nine years old, Suleiman grapples with understanding who the real traitors are, and he finds himself guilty of betraying his friends in an environment of suspicion in which the government monitors every movement and conversation. Most memorable in this beautifully written book is the relationship between Suleiman and his young mother. Suleiman wants to save her from the depressions that plague her in a country hostile not only to her husband's political beliefs but also to her gender: she still suffers the loss of her dreams after entering an arranged marriage at 15. Matar portrays their relationship in intimate, realistic, and heartbreaking scenes."
Courtesy of:
1. I plan on reading In The Country of men because we're studying different dictatorships, and rulers who gained their power from fear, so I became interested.
ReplyDelete2. I'm going to look for it in the library and if it's not there, I'll go to b&n.
Kshitij p. 4