Black Foam

A Novel

Haji Jabir author Sawad Hussain translator Marcia Lynx Qualey translator

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Amazon Publishing

Published:7th Feb '23

£19.99

Available for immediate dispatch.

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Black Foam cover

From award-winning Eritrean author Haji Jabir comes a profoundly intimate novel about one man’s tireless attempt to find his place in the world. Dawoud is on the run from his murky past, aiming to discover where he belongs. He tries to assimilate into different groups along his journey through North Africa and Israel, changing his clothes, his religious affiliations, and even his name to fit in, but the safety and peace he seeks remain elusive. It seems prejudice is everywhere, holding him back, when all he really wants is to create a simple life he can call his own. A chameleon, Dawoud—or David, Adal, or Dawit, depending on where and when you meet him—is not lost in this whirl of identities. In fact, he is defined by it. Dawoud’s journey is circuitous and specific, but the desire to belong is universal. Spellbinding to the final page, Black Foam is both intimate and grand in scale, much like the experiences of the millions of people migrating to find peace and safety in the twenty-first century.

Longlisted for the 2019 International Prize for Arabic Fiction Praise for Black Foam “A captivating tale of one man’s tireless journey to belong.” —Booklist “Veracity is always in doubt in this cunningly constructed novel where knowledge of when to reveal and when to conceal is reflected in a structure that frequently misleads the reader, fracturing time and truth.” —Irish Times “The Eritrean author Haji Jabir continues to dive into his favorite theme: the worlds of the marginalized on the African continent, transporting his reader this time from Asmara to Addis Ababa, taking him through different terrain, flying him to occupied Palestine, getting lost with him in the alleys of Jerusalem. It is a fluid mélange of literature, enjoyable narration, and documentary.” —Al Quds newspaper “[Black Foam] isn’t limited to the tragic tale that revolves around ‘Daoud,’ but rather it encompasses a human’s quest for himself, for his identity, for love. It delves into if it is possible for a refugee in such exceptional circumstances, pursued by death at every turn, to find love.” —Ida’at online newspaper “Through the realistic retelling imparted with literary flair, Jabir emerges as a skilled transmitter of others’ stories, documenting them so that the waves of forgetfulness don’t wash them away.” —The New Arab (Al-Araby Al-Jadeed) “An unusual tale, in my opinion, and in that of many others too…I admire how [Haji Jabir] delved into the psychological aspects by way of the main issues: identity and the search for survival…survival at any cost! There are two narratives in the novel, the immediate past of the protagonist and his present, a technique that many an author employs, but Jabir here is in his own league.” —Alharban (literary blog) “The Eritrean novelist Haji Jabir shows in his novel Black Foam the trials of the Falasha Jews in Israel, and from his novel questions emerge about religion, identity, and belonging; refuge, migration, and love; racism and injustice; and life and death.” —Nuq’tat Dhow (online newspaper) “A searing exposé of the plight of Ethiopian Jews who immigrate to Israel. There is a cinematic quality to Black Foam, a discovery of new worlds, with Haji Jabir pointing a camera, up close and intimate, at his protagonist’s anxieties and fancies. Scenes slice as Muslim Dawoud becomes Christian David then Jewish Dawit, all accompanied by a haunting soundtrack of loneliness and the indomitable will to survive.” —Leila Aboulela, author of River Spirit “Spellbinding to the final page, Black Foam is both intimate and grand in scale, much like the experiences of the millions of people migrating to find peace and safety in the twenty-first century.” —Brittle Paper “Dawit's plight is heartbreaking...Yet Jabir takes pains to humanize rather than idealize him…Jabir pays his protagonist the respect of not allowing readers to understand him entirely, trusting that, by the book's end, we will grieve for him all the same.” —Lily Meyer, NPR

ISBN: 9781542034029

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

240 pages