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Review: A Treaty Of Love

October 17, 2008 10:02
Samir El Youssef

By

Madeleine Kingsley,

Madeleine Kingsley

1 min read

By Samir El-Youssef
Halban, £12.99

First, you hope that Israeli Ruth and Palestinian Ibrahim - the displaced lovers of Samir El-Youssef's new novel - will work through their differences and triumph, that their "treaty of love" will symbolise the making of peace in the Middle East. "London is so big," says Ruth, "big enough to make us forget that we belong to hostile people."

Then, chapter by subtly sewn chapter, you are reminded that their cross-cultural challenge is almost superhuman. The hard facts are that Ruth's family home was built on land owned by an Arab and that Ibrahim was born in Shatila camp.

The couple, both in their late 30s, meet at a party in 1993, just after Rabin and Arafat do the impossible and shake hands on the White House lawn. Optimism draws a brief breath.

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