bc

Farewell, Damascus

book_age0+
detail_authorizedAUTHORIZED
1
FOLLOW
1K
READ
like
intro-logo
Blurb

Ghada Samman’s most recent novel, Farewell, Damascus is set in early 1960’s Damascus – a city that now languishes in the grip of corruption and political oppression following the Baathist takeover in Syria.

The book opens as Zain Khayyal, a university student and aspiring young writer, plots an early-morning escape from her house as her husband slumbers. Her mission: to get an illicit abortion, plans for which she’s divulged to no one, and to announce that she wants out of her stifling marriage. A rebel and a trail-blazer par excellence, Zain draws down the wrath of polite society and the authorities, political and religious alike, as she challenges attitudes and practices that demean rather than dignify, and a ruling regime that sucks the life out of both oppressed and oppressor. As the plot unfolds, Zain finds her way as a student to a neighbouring country which, though it grants her the freedom, respect and appreciation she had lacked in her homeland, becomes a place of anguished exile.

Armed with her accustomed humour, pathos and knack for suspense, Samman fearlessly tackles issues that roil societies across the globe to this day: the stigma that attaches to the divorced woman but not the divorced man; whether to choose a life partner for love, or for social status, prestige and material security; whether abortion is a crime or a means of forestalling needless undeserved suffering; lesbian intimacy as a declaration of freedom from male abuse and tyranny; r**e as an instrument of humiliation and subjugation and unconditional acceptance as healing balm. Farewell, Damascus is both a paean to a beloved homeland and an ode to human dignity.

chap-preview
Free preview
Cover
“Ghada Samman’s rebellion in the middle of the twentieth century was a slap in the face of a conservative Levantine society that did not believe in freedom of women reaching beyond their drawn boundaries, and a slap to bourgeois society that refused a working or divorced woman. Farewell, Damascus is a new slap by the author to the ‘barbarians’ of Syria who want women to live like prisoners in a bottle” – Maya al-Hajj – Al-Hayat Newspaper “Ghada Samman condensed her narrative, brimming with delight. This 200 page novel is full of ideas, opinions and attitudes, that are being expressed with the writer’s usual calm, and only freedom has its unique and very special voice, within the symphony that aims towards a better tomorrow for the people.” – Zahra Mar’ae – Alquds Alarabi “At the core of Samman’s writing is a cry for individual liberty… her work exhibits a boldness that defies restriction… her interesting blend of surrealism and verisimilitude, allows her to be simultaneously poetic and political in her prose writing… Samman’s perceptive and creative works seem to function as literary wake-up calls for those willing to listen.” - Pauline Homsi Vinson - Al Jadid Magazine

editor-pick
Dreame-Editor's pick

bc

My Sister Stole My Mate, And I Let Her

read
55.8K
bc

I'm Divorcing with You, Mr Billionaire!

read
62.9K
bc

In Bed With My Ex's Brother-in-Law

read
6.8K
bc

Getting Back My Secret Luna

read
5.5K
bc

Begging For The Rejected Luna's Attention

read
4.5K
bc

Bribing The Billionaire's Revenge

read
476.9K
bc

Rejection on the Full Moon

read
13.4K

Scan code to download app

download_iosApp Store
google icon
Google Play
Facebook