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Offspring of Paradise
 
 
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Offspring of Paradise [Paperback]

Safi Abdi
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 364 pages
  • Publisher: AuthorHouse (8 Oct 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1410794091
  • ISBN-13: 978-1410794093
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 13 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,946,202 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

The military junta that has ruled the land of Somalia with an iron fist since October 21, 1969, has at last succumbed to the evils of its own making. Its policy of divide and rule has eroded the very fabric of society, and pit brother against brother. It is 1991. The regime's last stronghold in the south is for the first time feeling what its sister cities in the north had suffered earlier...death and destruction. The city of Hamar is bleeding to its very last human drop. On foot, on donkey carts, and by every conceivable means, those who could move are on the move. Some fly from the rooftops like birds; some plunge into the furious waves, only to swim in the belly of the sharks; others dig into the shelter of the underworld. Premature demise and epidemic vandalism becomes the order of the day. This demise is, however, like no other, for it's the last nail in the coffin...the coffin that was Somalia Democratic Republic. After the violent assassination of her father early in the country's tumult, Hana's only surviving uncle bundles Hana, her pregnant mother, and her grandmother into the safety of a runaway car. A few miles away from the rubble of their home, their car comes under fire from a group of roving militiamen. Hana's uncle is instantly killed.¿A dozen or so men descend on Hana's pregnant mother, and out marches a baby boy who breathes his last before the African air fully hits his lungs. The traumatic events drive Hana's mother into the realms of the insane, and she is last seen melting into the dark night--

About the Author

Safi Abdi, born in the heartland of Somalia, has spent most of her life outside her motherland. She left Somalia at the age of thirteen and has since then lived and studied in diverse environments and cultures; an enriching experience that not only expanded her mind but also enriched her general outlook on life. This is her second book. Safi's first book (A Mighty Collision of Two Worlds) has also been published through 1stBooks Library. The novel is a case study on the perils of mixed marriages and is a good reference book on the subject. Safi has a keen interest in politics, religion and current issues. She is currently living in Dubai with her husband and children and can be contacted through her website: www.mightycollision.com

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars A Mighty Collision of Ideas, 16 July 2010
By 
Sofia (Bristol, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Offspring of Paradise (Paperback)
'Offspring of Paradise' is a truly unusual book: A book about war that steps back from dealing out too much horror and simultaneously a book about the vulnerabilities of peace. The two worlds sit slightly uncomfortably together, held together not entirely successfully by the story of Hana.

Hana is the six-year-old child who witnesses her father's brutal murder and mother's attempted rape in war-torn Somalia before her Grandmother somehow takes her out of the country to become a teenager in an unnamed country's refugee community. While her life has been saved in the very real sense by this move, she is then targeted by a fundamentalist evangelical community, who seek to save her once more through forced conversion to Christianity.

It's a strange read. Abdi's novel works best when it focuses on Somalia, highlighting the terrible suffering that seems almost universal there and the almost complete destruction of entire families by factional fighting. As soon as the action leaves Somalia (as it does relatively swiftly) the book suffers a loss of credibility. It's never clear what country Hana ends up in, where there's more than a hint of complicit official corruption; the refugee community and its tensions are never fully brought out; and the Christians Hana meets have wholly irrelevant criminal pasts. Hana herself is never truly three dimensional and she is the most developed of all the characters in the book.

This is a novel format for the collision of ideas. It's interesting, yes, to pair up Hana, an apparently nonchalant Muslim, with fanatical, fundamentalist Christians but Abdi doesn't do enough with it to make it real. It's daring too to juxtapose the dangers of physical peril (in the land of war) with spiritual peril (in the land of peace) but again, it's just not quite developed enough. The novel also delves into feminism, showing the war in Somalia to be very much the work and fault of the men, but ultimately the lead Somali women in the novel are all shown to be dependent on those stronger characters around them.

This is a frustratingly interesting book. It says a lot about Somalia's troubles, but tries too hard to be a big novel of ideas when it would have been better to focus on its strengths, Somalia and its women would have made a more interesting and thought-provoking novel on their own.


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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The forgotten war, 18 Oct 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Offspring of Paradise (Paperback)
Another excellent book from Safi Abdi. This book is a very well written book about war and refugees in Somalia. Reading the book gives you the impression that the author is telling a story that may very well have been happening. This Somalian civil war has been going on for more then 10 years and lots of people have died while thousands have been scattered around the world away from loved ones and family. This book should be a must read for all peace lovers and especially all Somali men all over the word.How can Somali men living abroad and in Somalia look at themselves in the mirrow every morning and then continue with this terrible war. Somali men, look at your women, it's time you let them take over the control running this beatiful country. The Somali men have shown they are not able to look after their own family let alone their country. A very well written book, thanks to the author for writing about this terrible war that everyone seems to have forgotten.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A window into a senseless conflict, 14 Jan 2004
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Offspring of Paradise (Paperback)
"Offspring of Paradise" is a great write on the evils of the Somali civil war. This book gives the reader an insight into a war that has played havoc with the lives of thousands of innocent people. More heartbreaking is it to learn that the Somali nation as a whole, and Somali men in particular, have yet to learn the lessons of their recent history. I must add that I'm also dismayed by the underhand methods that are employed by certain Christian evangelists...
Fatima

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Molly Martin's Reviews, 12 Jan 2005
By Safi Abdi - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Offspring of Paradise (Paperback)
Hana is only six when her world is turned upside down. Clan wars have begun in Somalia. Her father is dead by only hours, her brothers are taking part in the rampaging, her uncle is trying to spirit his mother and his brother's pregnant wife and young child away from danger when they are ambushed. Hana and her grandmother spend two years on the run before finally reaching the faint sanctuary of 'the wall' where they will live for a time. Hana becomes a school girl, the pair meet Mulki and Rune who offer hope, her grandmother dies, life goes on. First one then another apparent friend surface, prove themselves true or false and perhaps disappear again. At last Hana is on her way home to meet the mother lost to her when her sad journey began.

Writer Abdi states that the characters and specific narrative in her work are fictional as she details with clarity of one who has seen much of the horror of war and desperation of the refugees living in Somalia during the ethnic cleansing that took place during the last century. The Somalian Civil war lasted for over a decade, Abdi brings to life some of the thousands who were killed, raped and
maimed in the process and the thousands more were uprooted and left to try to make some type of life for themselves.

From the opening lines found in the pages of "Offspring of Paradise" Writer Abdi has created a gripping if chilling work. As we follow Little Hana and her family making their desperate try for escape right on to the last paragraph when we find a more grown up Hana hopeful that she will have a better future Abdi outlines the desperation of a whole body of people. Those who were facing discrimination were willing to use any means available for escape from the destruction and spoliation that becomes a reality in the country that was once the Somalia Democratic Republic. Reading "Offspring of Paradise" brings the reader right into the plight of the downtrodden; writer Abdi skillfully presents the notion that you are in the thick of what may well have taken place during that troublesome time.

On the pages of "Offspring of Paradise" Writer Abdi has crafted a startling, potent work filled with generously drawn characters, perilous story line, near to overwhelming state of affairs, prejudice and at times pleasantly puzzling discord in this powerful read. "Offspring of a Paradise" is the second book from this talented writer who is already hard at work on her next offering. Abdi also writes poetry and short stories which she posts on various writing sites on the internet.

Some minor language issues for the American reader are easily resolved. "Offspring of Paradise" includes a glossary of terms to aid those who might not be conversant with some of the terms. "Offspring of a Paradise" is a good book for a quiet, thoughtful afternoon, happy to recommend.

Reviewer: Molly Martin
(...)
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