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Michael Mohammed Ahmad (Editor)

Author of The Lebs

10 Works 98 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: (ed) Michael Mohammed Ahmad

Works by Michael Mohammed Ahmad (Editor)

The Lebs (2018) 41 copies, 1 review
After Australia (2020) 29 copies, 1 review
The Tribe (2014) 12 copies, 1 review
The Other Half of You (2021) 10 copies, 1 review
On Western Sydney (2012) 1 copy, 1 review
Westside jr 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Nationality
Australia

Members

Reviews

 
Flagged
greer.d | Jul 30, 2024 |
A novel filled overwhelmingly with repellent characters that one cannot find any sympathy for. The protagonist, Bani, is naive to the point where it's hard to sympathise with him either. This is not a patch on The Other Half of You, where Ahmad presents a much more mature and rounded Bani, and surrounds him with characters, a culture and a delimma that are much more complex and empathetic.
 
Flagged
gjky | Apr 9, 2023 |
Bani Adam is a member of "a minority of a minority of a minority"; an Alawite Shi'ite living in Sydney's Western suburbs. When Bani forms a liaison with a Christian girl, his father and his community condemn him, and insist that he choose a bride from within "the Tribe"; this is a rigid custom born of the fear that the Alawite minority might die out if not preserved.

Bani enters upon a series of attempts at arranged marriages, and eventually chooses a bride, with disastrous results.

Reading this book straight after Alice Pung's One Hundred Days was interesting; on the surface, they have so much in common. Both protagonists are first-generation children of strict and traditional immigrant parents. Both have a forbidden love affair. In both books the narrator is telling the story to their child. They even both cite the same verse from The Prophet. In Pung's novel though, there is a claustrophobia and tension that builds throughout, as Karuna tries to deal with her situation alone. In this book, Bani is surrounded by a community that he loves but needs to find some accommodation with to just be himself.

This book was at times amusing and at times sobering. The Arab community in Sydney is portrayed in a loving and self-deprecatory fashion, and Bani uses racial epithets that they would commonly use amongst themselves, but may be offensive to some readers.
… (more)
 
Flagged
gjky | Apr 9, 2023 |

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Michelle Law Contributor
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Roanna Gonsalves Contributor
Omar Sakr Contributor
Claire G. Coleman Contributor
Zoya Patel Contributor
Future D. Fidel Contributor
Khalid Warsame Contributor
Hannah Donnelly Contributor
Kaya Ortiz Contributor

Statistics

Works
10
Members
98
Popularity
#193,038
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
5
ISBNs
22

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