
Confessions of a Good Arab
Confessions of a Good Arab, one of the boldest artistic expressions in Israeli literature, plumbs the depths of the tragedy of the Jews and Arabs who share the same country. Yosef Sherara is the son of an Arab father and a Jewish mother. The book is written in the form of a confession, a kind of family saga, full of mythic elements and larger-than-life characters. Yosef’s maternal grandfather is a German-born Jew, who allies himself spiritually to Palestine and its Arab people. When the Nazis come to power in Germany, he travels to Palestine, but his wife cannot adapt to the Middle East and becomes mentally ill. Their daughter takes part in the War of Independence and becomes a national heroine. She marries her father’s old friend Azouri, a Palestinian Arab, who is a brilliant man and an expert in the field of the Jewish-Arab conflict. The meeting between the two turns into a titanic love story, the fruit of which is Yosef, born in Paris. In Yosef, an artist, the two traditions meet. His soul is the painful battlefield whereupon the Jewish and Arab elements perennially struggle.


- Languages
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Arabic, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish
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Swedish
Stockholm, Forum, 1986 -
English
London, Peter Halban, 1987;
New York, George Braziller, 1988;
London, Paladin Grafton, 1988 -
German
Frankfurt, Alibaba, 1988 -
Danish
Copenhagen, Gyldendal, 1988 -
Serbo-Croatian
Belgrade, Decje Novine, 1988 -
Slovene
Murska Sobota, Pomurska Zalozba, 1988 -
Spanish
Barcelona, Versal, 1989 -
Catalan
Barcelona, Ediciones 62, 1989 -
Dutch
Amsterdam, Meulenhoff, 1991 -
French
Lille, Miroirs, 1992;
pback: Paris, Stock, 1994 -
Norwegian
Oslo, Cappelens, 1995 -
Italian
Rome, Theoria, 1997;
Florence, Giuntina, 2012 -
Arabic
Damascus, Canaan, 2004
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Title | Confessions of a Good Arab |
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Writer's Last Name | Kaniuk |
Writer's First Name | Yoram |
Genre | Fiction |
Publisher (Hebrew) | Yedioth Ahronoth |
No. Pages | 152pp. |
Book title - Hebrew (phonetic) | Aravi Tov |
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“ If the heart of this book is romance, then its soul is history. Kaniuk's character serves as the private battleground for the contrinuing struggle between two overriding themes: the annihilation of European Jewry and the dispossession of Palestinian Arabs. ”
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“ Magical realism has come to the Middle East....[Kaniuk] has gone enthusiastically overboard and written a very original, provocative, and occasionally savage novel.”
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“ Kaniuk's fiery and provocative novel is out to fracture the badly set bone that deforms the Middle East.”