Where the Streets Had a Name explained

Where the Streets Had a Name
Author:Randa Abdel-Fattah
Language:English
Country:Australia
Genre:Children's novel
Publisher:Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd
Isbn:978-0-330-42420-2
Cover Artist:Oliver Strewe
Pub Date:2008
Media Type:Softcover
Pages:307 (311)
Preceded By:Ten Things I Hate About Me

Where the Streets Had a Name is a young adult novel by Randa Abdel-Fattah. It was published in April 2008, shortly after the death of the author's grandmother. The book won a 2009 Golden Inky Award.[1]

It is the only book of Abdel-Fattah's to contain a dedication, as follows:

To my Grandmother Sitti Jamilah, who passed away on 24th April, 2008, aged 98. I had hoped that you would live to see this book and that you would be allowed to touch the soil of your homeland again. It is my consolation that you died surrounded by my father and family and friends who cherished you. May you rest in peace. And to my father-May you see a free Palestine in your lifetime.

Plot

13-year-old Hayaat is a Muslim Palestinian girl living in Bethlehem. She lives in a small apartment with her family, who have been displaced from their home: her mother and brothers; her father, grieving the loss of his olive grove; her sister Jihan, who is planning a wedding; and her grandmother Zeynab, who spends her time telling stories from her past. Hayaat is determined and sometimes stubborn, but feels guilt and sadness over an accident from her childhood. She and her best friend Maysaa were caught in the blast from an exploding bomb. Fragments ricocheted off a wall towards Hayaat, scarring her face permanently and killing Maysaa. Frequently, she overhears her mother and grandmother talking, saying Who will marry her with those scars?

When her grandmother becomes ill, Hayaat resolves to travel to Jerusalem to fulfill Zeynab's wish to touch the soil of her ancestral home, believing it will save Zeynab's life. She and her best friend Samy, a Christian Palestinian and fan of football and The X Factor, begin the forbidden six-mile journey on a day they have no curfew. They travel through checkpoints and roadblocks, sneak over the West Bank wall, and meet other Palestinian travelers, a refugee boy named Naseem, and Israeli peace activists. Hayaat also learns more about the accident from her past.

Themes

The novel, set during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, discusses its themes via a quest-novel structure.

Hamoud Yahya Ahmed Mohsen of Hodeidah University and Ruzy Suliza Hashim of the National University of Malaysia note Fattah's use of the jar of soil, arguing via an ecocritical lens that she uses it to connect Palestinian displacement with ecological concerns.[2]

Critical reception

Adaptations

In 2017, Eva Di Cesare of Sydney's Monkey Baa Theatre Company adapted the book for stage.[7]

Translation into other languages

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah: A Conversation on Diversity in Children’s Writing #1 . betterreading.co.au . 17 September 2022.
  2. Yahya Ahmed . Hamoud . Suliza Hashim . Ruzy . A Handful of Soil: An Ecocritical Reading of Land in Randa Abdel-Fattah's Where the Streets Had a Name . Asiatic . December 2014 . 8 . 2 . 137-148.
  3. News: Shihab Nye . Naomi . Wisdom and laughter in a child’s view of Palestine . 18 September 2022 . The Electronic Intifada . 10 December 2008.
  4. Where the Streets Had a Name . Publishers Weekly . 17 September 2022.
  5. Where the Streets Had a Name . Kirkus Reviews . 1 October 2010 . 17 September 2022.
  6. Coats . Karen . Where the Streets Had a Name (review) . Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books . December 2010 . 64 . 4 . 170-171.
  7. News: Bedford . Kavita . Where the Streets Had a Name: Interview with Randa Abdel-Fattah . 17 September 2022 . The Point Magazine.