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William Sutcliffe: Imagining Gaza in London

What if the Gaza strip were relocated to Camberwell? Angela Kiverstein meets an author tackling big questions for young adult readers

October 2, 2017 14:57
William Sutcliffe
2 min read

London is a bombed-out ruin. St Pancras and the British Library are heaps of bricks, Westminster Abbey is intact — but just one wall of the Houses of Parliament remains. From Camden to Camberwell, a three-mile area is closed off, controlled by checkpoints. It is known as The Strip and the resistance smuggles in supplies through the Brixton Tunnels.

This is the landscape of William Sutcliffe’s new novel, We See Everything. A companion to his novel of 2013, The Wall, it puts an unsettlingly familiar filter over the former’s not quite explicit West Bank scenario.

“One of the most important tasks for fiction is to expand the empathy of readers,” says Sutcliffe. “By imagining a war like that happening in London, even young people can read it and think ‘what if it was me?’.”

In The Wall, teenage settler David goes through a tunnel and becomes involved with the life of a family on the other side of the wall. We See Everything feels more focused on the individual human experience of war — especially for Lex, son of a resistance leader and Alan, whose mission is to kill Lex’s father.