Leilah Nadir has a master's degree in English Literature from Edinburgh University and a joint honours bachelor's degree in English and history from McGill University. She has worked in the publishing industry in London and Vancouver. Her memoir The Orange Trees of Baghdad won the George Ryga award in 2008 and has been published in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, Italy, Turkey and France. Since the invasion of Iraq, she has written and broadcast political commentaries for the CBC, The Globe and Mail and The Georgia Straight. She also writes fiction and has published stories in Descant magazine and articles in Brick magazine and the anthology How They See Us: Meditations on America. She lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, with her husband and two children. Visit her website at www.leilahnadir.com
""Far more even than the terrifying bare facts and statistics, this
moving memoir, vividly evoking real people and their lives and
homes, lets us understand why Iraqis feel that Americans destroyed
their country."" - Noam Chomsky
Winner of the George Ryga Prize 2008 Praise for The Orange Trees of
Baghdad by Leilah Nadir from Canada, Australia, Italy, France and
Turkey "This is a powerful and important book." -- Vancouver Sun
"Leilah Nadir's The Orange Trees of Baghdad reminds us that Iraq is
not just a war; it is a country. Lovingly woven together from
inherited memory and family lore, her Iraq is infinitely more
vivid, more textured, and more heartbreaking than what we see
nightly on the news.... this is a book about what loss really means
-- the theft of history and of homeland."
-- Naomi Klein, author of No Logo and The Shock Doctrine In The
Orange Trees of Baghdad, Leilah Nadir writes about a place she has
never been to ... giving voice to so many émigrés who have been cut
off from their past by war and insurrection." -- Elle Canada
"Skillfully told with extraordinary warmth, her story gives us an
incredible and often surprising insight into a Middle-Eastern
culture that is simultaneously exotic and familiar, comforting and
terrifying ... This is a compelling, touching and beautifully
written book that thoughtfully challenges assumptions about a place
and a people lost in the miasma of war." -- Brisbane Courier Mail
"The book belongs as much to her father as it does to Nadir: she
uncovers her own past through his experiences ... her attempt to
trace her family tree in an uncommon land makes this a compelling
first book from a thoughtful writer." -- Quill and Quire "Nadir's
work is stunning in its brilliance and poignant in its elegance....
The Orange Trees of Baghdad is a compelling memoir, worthy of every
reader's time, precisely because it eschews a simplistic
understanding of all the issues it discusses."
-- Canadian Literature "The Orange Trees of Baghdad is unique in
that it is not firsthand reportage.... But this remove is what
gives Nadir's book its terrible poignancy." -- Georgia Straight
"... at once moving, disturbing, confusing, and wonderfully
hopeful.... Nadir succeeds in defining a face of contemporary war
that is rarely discussed, though it is the matter of a wealth of
historical literature. With incredible intricacy and remarkable
sensitivity she presents a portrait of the human struggles of
war.... These are lasting images that ... underscore the resilience
of the human spirit." -- Dr. Ivan Townshend, head judge of George
Ryga Award 2008 "In a book that somehow manages to be both
journalistic and intimate, the author eloquently reminds us that
Iraq's heart is a country, not a war. Her quest for her roots shows
us the tragedy of this people whose land and history has been
stolen from beneath them." -- France Culture "A very finely
written, deftly crafted work about Iraq that translates this epic
disaster into human terms and makes us understand the endless
suffering of its people. Touching, insightful and poignant." --
Eric Margolis, author of War at the Top of the World "Leilah
Nadir's insightful, searching story about her Iraqi roots, family,
exile, and survival, told in absorbing and moving language, reveals
the great civilization now under assault." -- George Elliot Clarke,
Poet Laureate of Toronto "The Orange Trees of Baghdad is a stunning
book, the best I've read in the past year. Leilah Nadir takes us on
her quest to meet the members of her family whose lives have been
uprooted by war. In the process, we are drawn into the heart of the
world's most ancient civilization. In the haunting, dreamlike pages
of this book, we discover that as Baghdad is destroyed, the roots
of our own deepest part are being torn asunder. Hypnotically
readable." -- James Laxer, author of The Border and The
Acadians
In this "powerful and important book" (Vancouver Sun), Leilah Nadir
uncovers her lost roots, in the Iraq her father left behind decades
ago. In the brutal aftermath of the invasion, a surprise reunion
brings east and west together. Orange Trees won the George Ryga
Award; Naomi Klein called it "Lovingly woven together ... reminds
us that Iraq is not just a war; it is a country."
Ask a Question About this Product More... |