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Green Almonds
Green Almonds: Letters from Palestine | AnaĆ"le Hermans
6 posts | 9 read | 7 to read
The graphic novel collaboration and true story of two sisters. Anaėle, a writer, leaves for Palestine volunteering in an aid program, swinging between her Palestinian friends and her Israeli friends. Delphine is an artist, left behind in Ličge, Belgium. From their different sides of the world, they exchange letters. Green Almonds: Letters from Palestine is a personal look into a complex reality, through the prism of the experience of a young woman writing letters to her sister about her feelings and adventures in the occupied territories. Green Almonds is an intimate story with big implications. A young woman discovers a country, works there, makes friends, lives a love story, and is confronted with the plight of the Palestinians, the violence on a daily basis that we see on our screens and read in our newspapers. Anaėle's story is brought to life by Delphine's simple and evocative drawings, which give full force to the subject and evoke the complexity of this conflict, creating a journey to the everyday life of Palestinians.Green Almonds: Letters from Palestine received the Doctors Without Borders Award for best travel diary highlighting the living conditions of populations in precarious situations when it was published in France in 2011.
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Megabooks
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Pickpick

This book reminded me of all the beautiful and heartbreaking stories my Palestinian friend Laila told me in college.

Anaële is a Belgian volunteer worker in Palestine for 9 months. Her sister, Delphine, who was in Belgium, illustrated their correspondence for this epistolary graphic memoir.

(Anecdote: Laila is now a cookbook author and was on Bourdain‘s Parts Unknown Palestine episode. Link below ā¬‡ļø)

#readingasia2021 #palestine #hoopla

Librarybelle Another graphic novel I may have to try. šŸ˜ 3y
Megabooks @Librarybelle it‘s books like this that I would not have sought out otherwise that make me happy I‘m doing this challenge! 3y
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sherri Read this a few years back. It was so well done. 3y
BarbaraBB I‘m so happy for the discoveries we make thanks to the challenges! 3y
Megabooks @sherri totally agree! 3y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB absolutely! 3y
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Lindy
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Pickpick

A collaborative travel memoir in #comics format, composed of letters between two Belgian sisters, one of whom stays home in Liege while the other volunteers for 10 months in Palestine in 2008. If you‘re looking for something lighter in tone than Joe Sacco‘s work, try this. #translation #graphicnovel #nonfiction

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Lindy
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My neighbourhood is a little particular; it‘s near Rachel‘s tomb. The Israelis decided to annex the tomb and build a military base out of it. A wall surrounds the tomb and Palestinians aren‘t allowed inside. So, there‘s a house near me with walls on three of its sides.

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sherri
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Pickpick

Anaële Hermans traveled from her home in Belgium to Palestine to volunteer with an aid organization. During that time she exchanged letters with her sister Delphine back home. Green Almonds brings these letters to life as a graphic novel.

I definitely recommend it, especially for people who like memoir, travel writing, and social justice issues.

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nalinisriv
Pickpick

Overall Verdict : Go for it.
It's an amazing travelogue between two sisters. I found the concept really interesting. Its a must read. It leaves one sentient about Palestine in a remarkable way. There are some issues in places. I felt some broken links are their and somethings are omitted to keep the focus on what's going on in Palestine. Overall, it is great. The moment I started reading it, I could not put it down.

nalinisriv Got it as a review copy from NetGalley 6y
3 likes1 comment
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lovelybookshelf
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Mehso-so

This travelogue is set up as letters between Anaƫle, a volunteer in an aid program in Palestine, and her sister Delphine in Belgium. I enjoyed Delphine's artwork, but I wish the narrative was Anaƫle's alone. Delphine's postcards are clunky, out of place, and interrupt the flow. They're sometimes shockingly dismissive of the intense things Anaƫle shares. This is worth reading just to view Palestine through Anaƫle's caring, thoughtful eyes.