Ports of Call

Amin Maalouf author Alberto Manguel translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Vintage Publishing

Published:3rd May '01

£9.99

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

Ports of Call cover

A love story set against the backdrop of war that deals with conflicts between father and son, past and present, as well as the political tensions of twentieth century Europe.

A graceful story of love across an insuperable gulf and a powerful allegory for the conflict that has beset the Middle East for the last half century.

To call your son Ossyane is like calling him Rebellion.

A graceful story of love across an insuperable gulf and a powerful allegory for the conflict that has beset the Middle East for the last half century.

To call your son Ossyane is like calling him Rebellion. For Ossyane’s father it is a gesture of protest by an excited Ottoman prince, for Ossyane himself it is a burdensome responsibility. At eighteen he leaves Beirut to study in Montpellier, far away from his father’s revolutionary aspirations for him. But it is 1938, and when war breaks out in Europe, Ossyane is drawn into the Resistance. His return to Beirut is a rebel hero’s welcome after all, and a joyful reunion with Clara, whom he first met in France. But if one war has brought the Jewish-Muslim couple together, another, much closer to home, is destined to separate Ossyane from the people and the world that he loves.

Maalouf is a master storyteller -- David Robinson * Sunday Telegraph *
A simple and touching love story...limpid and delicate in the telling * Times Literary Supplement *
A beautiful work of fiction -- Pierre Robert Leclerco * Le Monde *
Maalouf's novels recreate the thrill of childhood reading, that primitive mixture of learning about something unknown or unimagined and forgetting utterly about oneself. His is a voice which Europe cannot afford to ignore -- Claire Messud * Guardian *

ISBN: 9781860468902

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 13mm

Weight: 149g

208 pages