tahsintries's review against another edition

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azrah786's review against another edition

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3.5

CW: violence, gun violence, blood, injury, body horror, murder, death, child death, war, suicide, genocide, grief, colonisation, confinement
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As soon as I became aware that this was a sci-fi anthology I immediately added it to my tbr and I’ve finally got around to reading it.

Palestine +100 is a short story collection where twelve writers were asked to reimagine Palestine in 2048, a century after the Nakba. A few of the stories are translated and they range in subgenre, though there a significant inclusion of technology in each narrative.

Basma Ghalayini, the editor points out how Palestinian authors predominantly “write about their past through their present, knowingly or unknowingly” and I found this collection to be in the same vein with the writers expressing the present in their imagination of the future, making it just as valuable to learn from.

Some stories explore what a free Palestine would look like and what “free” actually means. Others touch on Palestinian resilience and resistance as well as themes of security and mental health under occupation, expanding on them under a sci-fi lens. As with any such collection it is a mixed bag and there were definitely some stories that I enjoyed more and resonated more with than others. Though despite being speculative each and every one of them has something that will really get you thinking and further put into perspective the Orwellian nature of things we’re witnessing here and now.

Which brings me to the story that will stick with me the most - Song of the Birds by Saleem Haddad. A poignant and phenomenal pie and I’d rather not give too much about it away. It’s subtle on the futuristic elements making the setting, which is Gaza, close to indistinguishable from present day.

What was absolutely jarring was reading the quote (here it is out of context)
“I’m thinking that you’re telling me the only way I can be free is to die”
all the while scrolling on social media to see people in Gaza proclaiming that those who had died early on in the “war” were the lucky ones, that they’d escaped the worst of the suffering, that at least they’d had people there to bury them and know to remember them..
Final Rating – 3.5/5 Stars

 

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2treads's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful reflective sad tense medium-paced

4.0

‘Sometimes, home is simply a matter of changing your perspective.’

This collection features stories that run the gamut when it comes to extrapolating a future for the Palestinian people and each are unique yet similar in the technology that will be created and advanced, the new ways in which walls will be built, the evolution of containment and collaboration.

But what is at the heart of all of these stories is memory of place and time. What was and is being taken, when it started and a hope for when it will end. The authors have all utilised "advanced tech" and the myriad ways in which it can be used to perpetuate violence, dispossesion, and disregard for the humanity of a group of people.

The resilience and esteem for their heritage that the Palestinian people have is inherent in every story, with emphasis placed on the passing down of historical memory and the weight it bears. How the memories of grandparents and great grandparents fuel the drive of resistance of young Palestinians today.

What stuck with me is the ways in which each story depicted acts of passive and active resistance.

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