Love is an ex-country : a memoir / Randa Jarrar.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781948226585
- ISBN: 1948226588
- Physical Description: 218 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
- Publisher: New York : Catapult, [2021]
- Copyright: ©2021.
Content descriptions
Summary, etc.: | "Queer. Muslim. Arab American. A proudly Fat woman. Randa Jarrar is all of these things. In this "viscerally elegant" and "intimately edgy" memoir of a cross-country road trip, she explores how to claim joy in an unraveling and hostile America. Randa Jarrar is a fearless voice of dissent who has been called "politically incorrect." As an American raised for a time in Egypt, and finding herself captivated by the story of a celebrated Egyptian belly dancer's journey across the United States in the 1940s, she sets off from her home in California to her parents' in Connecticut. Coloring this road trip are journeys abroad and recollections of a life lived with daring. Reclaiming her autonomy after a life of survival--domestic assault as a child, and later, as a wife; threats and doxxing after her viral tweet about Barbara Bush--Jarrar offers a bold look at domestic violence, single motherhood, and sexuality through the lens of the punished-yet-triumphant body. On the way, she schools a rest-stop racist, destroys Confederate flags in the desert, and visits the Chicago neighborhood where her immigrant parents first lived. Hailed as "one of the finest writers of her generation" (Laila Lalami), Jarrar delivers a euphoric and critical, funny and profound memoir that will speak to anyone who has felt erased, asserting: I am here. I am joyful."--provided by publisher. |
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Genre: | Biographies. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

BookList Review
Love Is an Ex-Country : A Memoir
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
In this cutting and triumphant memoir-in-essays, Jarrar (A Map of Home, 2008; Him, Me, Muhammad Ali, 2016) lays bare her continuing fight for validation and love in a world unused to celebrating people that look and think like her. Identifying as a fat, queer Palestinian woman, born in America and raised in Egypt, Jarrar sits at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities. Her upbringing and young adulthood were rife with abuse from her father and the father of her child. This combination of mistreatment shaped Jarrar into the fierce, merciless thinker and writer that she is today. These essays explore her dramatically unstable early life, the formation of her adult identity, her sexuality, and her insatiable hunger for new experiences. The memoir itself traverses the globe from Texas to Connecticut to the Middle East to Berlin, with Jarrar's grit and intelligence leaping off every page. The entire book is a symphony for the pushed-out and the unheard.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020