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Message in a Bottle

]“If people like you and me try to get to know each other the future might have a chance of turning out some other colour than the red of spilt blood and the black of hate.”(p. 33)

This translation of Valerie Zenatti’s short French novel is a fascinating exploration of life on the two sides of the West Bank. Through the eyes of her young adult protagonists, the Israel-Palestine conflict is brought to life for a teenage audience, uncompromising in its portrayal of the pain, frustration, distrust and despair, yet full of hope and promise for a different future.

After a few false notes at the start, I found the writing style lean and involving, bristling with real emotion and evocative imagery. The first-person narrative switches between the Israeli Tal, tenacious and hopeful, and the Palestinian Naim, angry and sharp-tongued, yet secretly vulnerable and sensitive, interspersed with their shared emails, at first guarded, then growing in trust. As such, the novel is a celebration of the power and potential of modern information technology, enabling communication across barriers of barbed wire, cultural difference and historical hatred. Tal herself suggests that “if we could agree on words we could agree on everything”(p. 133), and Message in a Bottle rings with the hope that shared words of empathy and understanding between strangers might succeed where political negotiation has failed.

 At a time when conflict in the Middle East dominates TV news coverage, this seems an important book to add to secondary school resources. Under 160 pages long and written in short chapters, it feels very manageable for whole-class study and with skilful handling should provoke thoughtful questions, strong emotions and rewarding discussion. Teachers may wish to be aware of some occasional (but unobtrusive) swearing, and the first-hand account of a suicide bombing of a bus, an event treated with great sensitivity and lacking any gratuitous description.

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2008-04-06

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Listing Information
Author: Valerie Zenatti (translated by Adriana Hunter)
Genre: Social Realism, Literature in Translation
Age Range (see age categories): 14+
Theme/Subject: Israel-Palestine, Conflict, Terrorism, Suicide Bombing, Communication, Email, Difference, Friendship
Publisher: Bloomsbury
ISBN: 9780747590446
Reviewer: Darren Coult
Notes: Translated from French
Title: Message in a Bottle
Hits: 407
Added: 2008-04-06 10:13:57
Last updated: 2008-06-27 18:52:56

Reviews (1)
Reviewed by Jane Gardiner
Reviewed by nikkig, 2008-05-17

Synopsis When Israeli teenager Tal Levine decides to throw a message in a bottle into the Gaza Sea, she has little idea what to expect. Against all the odds Tal longs to strike up a correspondence with someone on the other side – to forge something positive out of the turbulent and troubled times in which Israelis and Palestinians live. But what kind of response might a |Palestinian give to an Israeli girl? Review This novel, squarely aimed at older teenagers, provides a vivid picture of the lives of those caught up in this part of the Arab-Israeli conflict and also informs the reader about some of the history that has led to the present situation. This information is woven so skilfully into the plot that at no point is the reader left feeling that they have been preached at or somehow found their way into a text book of some kind. This is an impressive achievement and one of which the writer should be proud. I found the novel to be flawed by its central characters, though. I did not believe in Tal or in 'Gazaman' or rather, I did not like them enough to want to believe in them, and, without that central relationship engaging me, the novel fell rather flat. It's a good read if you want to know more about this particular conflict but if you want 'Romeo and Juliet' style star crossed lovers then I'd go for Shakespeare's original or even Malorie Blackman's 'Noughts and Crosses'.

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