The Map of Salt and Stars, by Jennifer
Zeynab Joukhadar, follows the plight of Nour, a young Syrian girl and her
family. Nour's family was living in New York City, but after the death of her
father (Baba), Nour's mama decides to move the family back to Syria. The family
isn't back in Syria long before they are touched by war. Nour tries to take
comfort in the stories her Baba told her of Rawiya, a legendary girl, who
disguised herself as a boy in order to travel with a mapmaker charting the Mediterranean
for the first time. Nour's mother also makes maps, and, as her family flees
Syria for Jordan, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Morocco, and Ceuta, they end up
mirroring the journey of Rawiya from the past.
I have mixed feelings about this book. I liked the parallels the author drew not only between maps of the past and present, but also the maps we contain within ourselves, as we journey through our lives. There are many instances where you get a real sense of the danger, suffering, and loss refugees must feel as they try to find food, safety, and someone who will give them a new "home."
I have mixed feelings about this book. I liked the parallels the author drew not only between maps of the past and present, but also the maps we contain within ourselves, as we journey through our lives. There are many instances where you get a real sense of the danger, suffering, and loss refugees must feel as they try to find food, safety, and someone who will give them a new "home."
Nour has synesthesia, a condition that allows her to see colours and shapes for smells, sounds, and letters. For example, Nour sees her mother's angry voice as red, almost white; her sister's laugh as pink-and-purple; and, when oil and fat sizzle in a pan, it pops like yellow and black bursts in her ears. The fact that Nour experiences multiple senses in colours and shapes also reminds me of the colours and shapes on a map.
I
also like that there were strong female characters in this book: all of them
had to make hard choices and sacrifices. I continue to be amazed about
civilization's ability to be humane and inhumane in times of crises.
However,
I found the transitions between the Nour and Rawiya's stories very confusing. Three
asterisks were all that separated one timeline from another within the chapters,
and sometimes there was extra spacing between paragraphs making me think the
storyline was switching when it wasn't. I also had to flip back through the
book at times to remember where one girl's story had ended off before it went
to the other girl's story. I feel the poor transitioning prevented me from
truly engaging with either storyline, and turned what could have been a great
book into just a good book.
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