Habibi
Like many 14-year-old girls growing up in St Louis, Liyana Abboud's life revolves around her immediate family, her school, her neighborhood, and her small circle of friends. She has already experienced her first kiss and she enjoys writing poetry, which she occasionally shares with her old fourth grade teacher who first encouraged her in creative writing. When her father announces that he wants to return with his family to his hometown, Jerusalem, Liyana is initially stunned, even as her family packs a few belongings and sells most of their worldly goods. Life changes dramatically for Liyana and her good-natured younger brother, Rafik, when they move halfway across the world to a place Liyana has only known through headlines and nightly news reports. Her Arabic-speaking relatives are all strangers to her and even her father seems to have changed a bit in the context of his native culture. Liyana soon develops a close relationship, however, with Sitti, her grandmother; although they don't speak the same language, they recognize one another as kindred spirits. Her passion for life and language, for justice and humanity, leads her down some unfamiliar streets in Jerusalem, looking for "...a door in the heart that had no lock on it." She finds it in a most surprising place: in the heart of a Jewish boy named Omer. Liyana is an extremely likable, well-rounded character, and readers will enjoy accompanying her on her journeys to and through Jerusalem, as well as on her journey of self-discovery. Naomi Shihab Nye's crackling prose is filled with humor, imagery, compassion and insight which all work together to create one of the strongest senses of place ever seen in a work of fiction for children, a place where "...water came from the earth and stories sprang from the stones." ©1997 Cooperative Children's Book Center
CCBC Age Recommendation: Ages 11-14
Age Range:
Grades 6-8 (Ages 11-13)
Grades 9-12 (Age 14 and older)
Format:
Novel
Subjects:
Families
Grandmothers
Identity
Moving
Writers and Writing
Diversity subjects:
Arab
Middle East
Jewish
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster
Publish Year: 1997
Pages: 259
ISBN: 0689801491
CCBC Location: Fiction, Nye