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Mosab Abu Toha is a Palestinian writer, poet, scholar, and librarian from the Gaza Strip. His debut book of poetry, Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear (2022) won the Palestine Book Award and an American Book Award. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Walcott Poetry Prize. [1]
Free Fall is the fourth novel of English novelist William Golding, first published in 1959. [1] Written in the first person, it is a self-examination by an English painter, Samuel Mountjoy, held in a German POW camp during World War II .
Gaza 2010 7. Zamzouma Leaves the House, Against Hunger Project, Gaza, 2007 8. Kaiouse at a Press Conference, Tamer Institute, GTZ, Gaza 2007 9. The Distant City, Tamer Institute, GTZ, Gaza 2007 10. Sheep Don't Eat Cats, Tamer Institute, UNESCO, 2006 (was listed on IPPY's honor list as one of the world's best 59 children's stories 2008-2010) 11.
The transgender subjects of “The Belle from Gaza” speak with a disarming frankness. This in turn implies the approachable and intimate nature of its production, but any dangers posed to its ...
Palestinian literature is one of numerous Arabic literatures, but its affiliation is national, rather than territorial. [3] While Egyptian literature is that written in Egypt, Jordanian literature is that written in Jordan etc., and up until the 1948 Arab–Israeli war, Palestinian literature was also territory-bound, since the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight it has become "a literature ...
The Wall Street Journal reported that the United States supplied Israel with 2,000-pound bunker buster bombs to be dropped on Gaza, a 25-mile strip of land with more than 2 million people living ...
A filmmaker burns his clapperboard for warmth. A schoolteacher scavenges to feed his students. A stand-up comedian arrives at a gig to find the venue bombed. In “From Ground Zero,” Palestine ...
Its lyrics take the perspective of a boy growing up in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip. Singer Steve Hogarth explained, "This is a song for the people – especially the children – of Gaza. It was written after many conversations with ordinary Palestinians living in the refugee camps of Gaza and the West Bank.