Sleeping on a Wire

Conversations with Palestinians in Israel

David Grossman author Hiam Watzman translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Vintage Publishing

Published:2nd Sep '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Sleeping on a Wire cover

A ground-breaking and profundly important portrayal of the Arab population in Israel

Israel: Jewish state and national homeland to Jews the world over. But a fifth of its population is Arab, a people who feel themselves to be an inseparable part of the Arab nation, most of which is still technically at war with the State of Israel.

Israel: Jewish state and national homeland to Jews the world over. But a fifth of its population is Arab, a people who feel themselves to be an inseparable part of the Arab nation, most of which is still technically at war with the State of Israel.

In the summer of 1991 David Grossman set out on a journey into the world of Arab citizens of his country. Sleeping on a Wire is an account of what he found. It is about men and women fighting to find a voice, to pick out the pulse of their own identity in a land that doesn't seem to be theirs. He has not written about open conflict. Rather it is a story of ferment beneath the surface, and an intensifying bitterness which can only exacerbate the troubles of the Middle East.

Intelligent, sympathetic, resonant and accessible -- Nick Hornby * Sunday Times *
Outstanding... Unblinkingly harsh, this journey is also, in its sheer honesty and decency, a work of hope * Observer *
The Yellow Wind established Grossman as one of Israel's finest political writers. His latest examination of the Palestinian tragedy is of equal quality, sympathetic without being patronising, sensitive to the point of pain -- Robert Fisk * Independent *
A writer of passionate self-honesty, unafraid to ask terrible questions -- Nadine Gordimer
A fine, sympathetic book... Its insights reverberate far beyond the Middle East * Scotsman *

ISBN: 9780099552284

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 20mm

Weight: 234g

336 pages