Men in the Sun and Other Palestinian Stories

Paperback, 117 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 1999 by Lynne Rienner.

ISBN:
978-0-89410-857-0
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Men in the Sun (Arabic: رجال في الشمس, romanized: Rijāl fī al-Shams) is a novel by Palestinian writer and political activist Ghassan Kanafani (1936–72), originally published in 1962. Men in the Sun follows three Palestinian refugees seeking to travel from the refugee camps in Iraq, where they cannot find work, to Kuwait where they hope to find work as laborers in the oil boom.

2 editions

Men in the Sun

4 stars

The novella that gives the title to the book is one of the most devastating things I have ever read. In a raw, dry style, it narrates the journey of undertaken by three Palestinian men seeking to reach Kuwait in search of work and a better life. The narrative is imbued with symbolism (desert rats eating smaller rats, black birds crossing the sky), never crossing the line into romanticism or kitch. The story has a clear political message, an indictment of the way Arab countries abandoned Palestinians to their faith, but also a more general significance, sadly reminiscent of today's journeys across the channel, the Mediterranean or the Mexico desert. I found the other short stories that make up the book slightly less mind-blowing. A letter from Gaza punched me in the guts because it could have been written last year.

This book does not pass the Bechdel Test.

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4 stars

Subjects

  • Palestine -- Social life and customs -- Fiction

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