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Is This How You Eat a Watermelon? with Zein El-Amine & Alison Glick

  • Making Worlds Bookstore & Social Center 210 South 45th Street Philadelphia, PA, 19104 United States (map)

Making Worlds Cooperative Bookstore and Social Center | Reading and Dissuasion

Zein El-Amine will read from his collection of short stories "Is This How You Eat A Watermelon" in conversation with Alison Glick.

Is This How You Eat a Watermelon? invites readers into a world where love, war, and trauma collide with the desire to consume life—or be consumed by it.

Here, a dozen boarding school students find themselves stranded at the beginning of the Lebanese Civil War. A young man, a young woman, and a mistreated monkey unite in a bid to survive. Even Israel’s war on Lebanon cannot stop an old woman from getting her fix of nicotine. A young Lebanese student on a visit to Bahrain is wrongly implicated as a terrorist and placed in a prison with other political prisoners where light and hope is absconding. Fresh snow compels a sacrilegious undertaking from a father much to the shock of his children. Shared trauma takes the shape of spectral phantoms. And in the titular story, a hedonistic man eats himself to an early death with the desecration of the city of Beirut forming the backdrop.

Proficient and empathetic, these seven short stories span war-torn Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and the United States to tell stories of transit and survival. With commitment to the vulnerability of the human experience and a fierce loyalty to characters bearing the trauma of war, Zein El-Amine’s collection is joyful and devastating, daring the reader to look away.

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Zein El-Amine is a Lebanese-born poet and writer. He has an MFA in Poetry from the University of Maryland. His poems have appeared in Wild River ReviewFolioBeltway QuarterlyForeign Policy In FocusCityLit, and others. His latest poetry manuscript “A Travel Guide for the Exiled” was recently shortlisted for the Bergman Prize, judged by Louise Glück. His short stories have appeared in the Uno Mas, JadaliyyaMiddle East ReportWild River ReviewAbout Place Journal, and in Bound Off.

Alison Glick first traveled to the Middle East to live in Israel on a kibbutz and in a town near Haifa, an experience that led her to work for freedom and dignity for all in Israel/Palestine. After studying Middle East History at Temple University, she lived in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and Yarmouk Refugee Camp in Syria for nearly seven years, working as a teacher, human rights researcher, and freelance writer. Alison’s writing has appeared in the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, Arab Studies Quarterly, and Mondoweiss. The Other End of the Sea is her first novel.