The Attack
The Attack book cover

The Attack

Paperback – April 25, 2007

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
272
Publisher
Anchor
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307275707
Dimensions
7.92 x 5.3 x 0.59 inches
Weight
6.9 ounces

Description

“Engrossing…audaciously conceived, courageously important [and] urgently humane, The Attack is Khadra’s best and most ambitious novel yet.” — The Los Angeles Time “A genuine work of art.” — The Philadelphia Inquirer “Gripping, dynamic. . . .Both a fierce rendering of geopolitical tensions and a plea for peace.” — Tne New York Times “A powerfully dark vision . . . of the [Arab-Israeli] conflict.” — The New Yorker “An engaging glimpse into the kinds of stories we never hear on CNN.” — TimeOut Chicago YASMINA KHADRA is the pen name of the former Algerian army officer Mohammed Moulessehoul. He adopted his wife's name as a pseudonym to avoid military censorship. He is the author of more than 20 books, at least six of which have been published in English, among them The Swallows of Kabul and The Attack , both shortlisted for the IMPAC literary award. Khadra’s work has been published in 45 countries. He has twice been honored by the Académie française, winning both the Médaille de vermeil (2001) and Grand Prix de littérature (2012). His latest novel is The Angels Die (2016). He lives in France. The New York Times describes Khadra as, “a writer who can understand man wherever he is.” Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. After the operation, Ezra Benhaim, our hospital director, comes to see me in my office. He's an alert, lively gentleman, despite his sixty-odd years and his increasing corpulence. Around the hospital, he's known as "the Sergeant," because he's an outrageous despot with a sense of humor that always seems to show up a little late. But when the going gets tough, he's the first to roll up his sleeves and the last to leave the shop.Before I became a naturalized Israeli citizen, back when I was a young surgeon moving heaven and earth to get licensed, he was there. Even though he was still just a modest chief of service at the time, he used the little influence his position afforded him to keep my detractors at bay. In those days, it was hard for a son of Bedouins to join the brotherhood of the highly educated elite without provoking a sort of reflexive disgust. The other medical school graduates in my class were wealthy young Jews who wore gold chain bracelets and parked their convertibles in the hospital lot. They looked down their noses at me and perceived each of my successes as a threat to their social standing. And so, whenever one of them pushed me too far, Ezra wouldn't even want to know who started first; he took my side as a matter of course.He pushes the door open without knocking, comes in, and looks at me with his head tilted to one side and the hint of a smile on his lips. This is his way of communicating his satisfaction. Then, after I pivot my armchair to face him, he takes off his glasses, wipes them on the front of his lab coat, and says, "It looks like you had to go all the way to the next world to bring your patient back.""Let's not exaggerate."He puts his glasses back on his nose, flares his unattractive nostrils, nods his head; then, after a brief meditation, his face regains its austerity. "Are you coming to the club this evening?""Not possible. My wife's due home tonight.""What about our return match?""Which one? You haven't won a single game against me.""You're not fair, Amin. You always take advantage of my bad days and score lots of points. But today, when I feel great, you back out."I lean far back in my chair so I can stare at him properly. "You know what it is, my poor old Ezra? You don't have as much punch as you used to, and I hate myself for taking advantage of you.""Don't bury me quite yet. Sooner or later, I'm going to shut you up once and for all.""You don't need a racket for that. A simple suspension would do the trick."He promises to think about it, brings a finger to his temple in a casual salute, and goes back to badgering the nurses in the corridors.Once I'm alone, I try to go back to where I was before Ezra's intrusion and remember that I was about to call my wife. I pick up the phone, dial our number, and hang up again at the end of the seventh ring. My watch reads 1:12 p.m. If Sihem took the nine o'clock bus, she should have arrived home some time ago."You worry too much!" cries Dr. Kim Yehuda, surprising me by bursting into my cubbyhole. Continuing without pause, she says, "I knocked before I came in. You were lost in space. . . .""I'm sorry, I didn't hear you."She dismisses my apology with a haughty hand, observes my furrowing brow, and asks, "Were you calling your house?""I can hide nothing from you.""And, obviously, Sihem hasn't come home yet?"Her insight irritates me, but I've learned to live with it. We've known each other since we were at the university together. We weren't in the same class--I was about three years ahead of her--but we hit it off right away. She was beautiful and spontaneous and far more open-minded than the other students, who had to bite their tongues a few times before they'd ask an Arab for a light, even if he was a brilliant student and a handsome lad to boot. Kim had an easy laugh and a generous heart. Our romance was brief and disconcertingly naïve. I suffered enormously when a young Russian god, freshly arrived from his Komsomol, came and stole her away from me. Good sport that I was, I didn't put up any fight. Later, I married Sihem, and then, without warning, very shortly after the Soviet empire fell apart, the Russian went back home; but we've remained excellent friends, Kim and I, and our close collaboration has forged a powerful bond between us."It's the end of the holiday today," she reminds me. "The roads are jammed. Have you tried to reach her at her grandmother's?""There's no telephone at the farm.""Call her on her mobile phone.""She forgot it at home again."She spreads out her arms in resignation: "That's bad luck.""For whom?"She raises one magnificent eyebrow and shakes a warning finger at me. "The tragedy of certain well-intentioned people," she declares, "is that they don't have the courage of their commitments, and they fail to follow their ideas to their logical conclusion.""The time is right," I say, rising from my chair. "The operation was very stressful, and we need to regain our strength. . . ."Grabbing her by the elbow, I push her into the corridor. "Walk on ahead, my lovely. I want to see all the wonders you're pulling behind you.""Would you dare repeat that in front of Sihem?""Only imbeciles never change their minds."Kim's laughter lights up the hospital corridor like a garland of bright flowers in a home for the dying. * * *In the canteen, Ilan Ros joins us just as we're finishing our lunch. He sets his overloaded tray on the table and places himself on my right so that he's facing Kim. His jowls are scarlet, and he's wearing a loose apron over his Pantagruelian belly. He begins by gobbling up three slices of cold meat in quick succession and then wipes his mouth on a paper napkin. "Are you still looking for a second house?" he asks me amid a lot of voracious smacking."That depends on where it is."“I think I’ve come up with something for you. Not far from Ashkelon. A pretty little villa with just what you need to tune out completely.”My wife and I have been looking for a small house on the seashore for more than a year. Sihem loves the sea. Every other weekend, my hospital duties permitting, we get into our car and head for the beach. We walk on the sand for a long time, and then we climb a dune and stare at the horizon until late in the night. Sunsets exercise a degree of fascination on Sihem that I've never been able to get to the bottom of."You think I can afford it?" I ask.Ilan Ros utters a brief laugh, and his crimson neck shakes like gelatin. "Amin, you haven't put your hand in your pocket for so long that I figure you must have plenty socked away. Surely enough to make at least half of your dreams come true . . ."Suddenly, a tremendous explosion shakes the walls of the canteen and sets the glasses tinkling. Everyone in the place looks at one another, puzzled, and then those close to the picture windows get up from their tables and peer out. Kim and I rush to the nearest window. Outside, the people at work in the hospital courtyard are standing still, with their faces turned toward the north. The facades of the buildings across the way prevent us from seeing farther."That's got to be a terrorist attack," someone says.Kim and I run out into the corridor. A group of nurses is already coming up from the basement and racing toward the lobby. Judging from the force of the shock wave, I'd say the explosion couldn't have gone off very far away. A security guard switches on his transceiver to inquire about the situation. The person he's talking to doesn't know any more than he does. We storm the elevator, get out on the top floor, and hurry to the terrace overlooking the south wing of the building. A few curious people are already there, gazing out, with their hands shading their eyes. They're looking in the direction of a cloud of smoke rising about a dozen blocks from the hospital.A security guard speaks into his radio: "It's coming from the direction of Hakirya," he says. "A bomb, maybe a suicide bomber. Or a booby-trapped vehicle. I have no information. All I can see is smoke coming from whatever the target was.""We have to go back down," Kim tells me."You're right. We have to get ready to receive the first evacuees."Ten minutes later, bits of information combine to evoke a veritable carnage. Some people say a bus was blown up; others say it was a restaurant. The hospital switchboard is practically smoking. We've got a red alert.Ezra Benhaim orders the crisis-management team to stand by. Nurses and surgeons go to the emergency room, where stretchers and gurneys are arranged in a frenetic but orderly carousel. This isn't the first time that Tel Aviv's been shaken by a bomb, and after each experience our responders operate with increased efficiency. But an attack remains an attack. It wears you down. You manage it technically, not humanely. Turmoil and terror aren't compatible with sangfroid. When horror strikes, the heart is always its first target.I reach the emergency room in my turn. Ezra's in command there, his face pallid, his mobile phone glued to his ear. With one hand, he tries to direct the preparations for surgical interventions."A suicide bomber blew himself up in a restaurant," he announces. "There are many dead and many more wounded. Evacuate wards three and four, and prepare to receive the first victims. The ambulances are on the way."Kim, who's been in her office doing her own telephoning, catches up with me in ward five. This is where the most gravely wounded will be sent. Sometimes the operating room's too crowded, and surgery is performed on the spot. Three other surgeons and I check the various pieces of equipment. Nurses are busy around the operating tables, making nimble, precise movements.Kim proceeds to turn on the machines. As she does so, she informs me that there are at least eleven people dead.Sirens are wailing outside. The first ambulances invade the hospital courtyard. I leave Kim with the machines and rejoin Ezra in the lobby. The cries of the wounded echo through the wards. A nearly naked woman, as enormous as her fright, twists around on a stretcher. The stretcher-bearers carrying her are having a hard time calming her down. She passes in front of me, with her hair standing up and her eyes bulging. Immediately behind her, a young boy arrives, covered with blood but still breathing. His face and arms are black, as though he's just come up out of a coal mine. I take hold of his gurney and wheel him to one side to keep the passage free. A nurse comes to help me."His hand is gone!" she cries."This is no time to lose your nerve," I tell her. "Put a tourniquet on him and take him to the operating room immediately. There's not a minute to spare.""Very well, Doctor.""Are you sure you'll be all right?""Don't worry about me, Doctor. I'll manage."In the course of fifteen minutes, the lobby of the emergency room is transformed into a battlefield. No fewer than a hundred wounded people are packed into this space, the majority of them lying on the floor. All the gurneys are loaded with broken bodies, many horribly riddled with splinters and shards, some suffering from severe burns in several places. The whole hospital echoes with wailing and screaming. From time to time, a single cry pierces the din, underlining the death of a victim. One of them dies in my hands without giving me time to examine him. Kim informs me that the operating room is now completely full and that we have to start channeling the most serious cases to ward five. A wounded man demands to be treated immediately. His back is flayed from one end to the other, and part of one bare shoulder blade is showing. When he sees that no one is coming to his aid, he grabs a nurse by the hair. It takes three strapping young men to make him let go. A little farther on, another injured man, his body covered with cuts, screams and thrashes about madly, lunging so hard that he falls off his stretcher, which is wedged between two gurneys. He lies on the floor and slashes with his fists at the empty air. The nurse who's trying to care for him looks overwhelmed. Her eyes light up when she notices me."Oh, Dr. Amin. Hurry, hurry. . . ."Suddenly, the injured man stiffens; his groans, his convulsions, his flailing all cease at once, his body grows still, and his arms fall across his chest, like a puppet whose strings have just been cut. In a split second, the expression of pain on his flushed features changes to a look of dementia, a mixture of cold rage and disgust. When I bend over him, he glowers at me menacingly, his teeth bared in a ferocious grimace. He pushes me away with a fierce thrust of his hand and mutters, "I don't want any Arab touching me. I'd rather croak."I seize his wrist and force his arm down to his side. "Hold him tight," I tell the nurse. "I'm going to examine him.""Don't touch me," the injured man says, trying to rise. "I forbid you to lay a hand on me."He spits at me, but he's breathless, and his saliva lands on his chin, viscid and shimmering. Furious tears start spilling over his eyelids. I remove his jacket. His stomach is a spongy mass of pulped flesh that contracts whenever he makes an effort. He's lost a great deal of blood, and his cries only serve to intensify his hemorrhaging."He has to be operated on right away."I signal to a male nurse to help me put the injured man back on his stretcher. Then, pushing aside the gurneys blocking our path, I make for the operating room. The patient stares at me, his hate-filled eyes on the point of rolling back into his head. He tries to protest, but his contortions have worn him out. Prostrate and helpless, he turns his head away so he won't have to look at me and surrenders to the drowsiness he can no longer resist. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the bestselling author of
  • The Swallows of Kabul
  • comes this timely and haunting novel that powerfully illuminates the devastating human costs of terrorism.Dr. Amin Jaafari is an Arab-Israeli surgeon at a hospital in Tel Aviv. As an admired and respected member of his community, he has carved a space for himself and his wife, Sihem, at the crossroads of two troubled societies. Jaafari’s world is abruptly shattered when Sihem is killed in a suicide bombing.As evidence mounts that Sihem could have been responsible for the catastrophic bombing, Jaafari begins a tortured search for answers. Faced with the ultimate betrayal, he must find a way to reconcile his cherished memories of his wife with the growing realization that she may have had another life, one that was entirely removed from the comfortable, modern existence that they shared.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(171)
★★★★
25%
(143)
★★★
15%
(86)
★★
7%
(40)
23%
(131)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Provocative. Jarring. Important read.

This book shook me to the core. It is the story of Dr. Amin Jafaari, a well-respected and successful surgeon in a Tel Aviv hospital who also happens to be an Israeli-Arab. The book opens with a devastating suicide attack in Tel Aviv. Amin's hospital is immediately mobilized and he "goes into action" trying to save innocent victims from the terrorist attack that ultimately claims 17 lives. As Amin heads home to recover from his exhaustion, he expects to find comfort from his wife Sihem. He is surprised and puzzled to find the house empty and Sihem yet to return from a three-day visit to her relatives near Nazareth.

Amin is awakened by a phone call five hours later, still disoriented from a lack of sleep, and called back to the hospital by his detective friend, Navid with still no idea about the reality about to confront him -- Sihem is suspected of being the suicide bomber.

The book is a remarkable story about Amin's attempt to come to grips with the incomprehensibility of the situation now confronting him. Was his wife really capable of such an "evil" act? If she was, could he have been "blind" to this? How could he have not been aware of what drove her to make such a choice? Did she betray him in any other ways?

While such a personal journey could provide for compelling reading, in Khadra's hand, the broader context of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict provides an even more provocative, timely and reflective book. Khadra doesn't impose answers on the readers. What he does do is reflect remarkably vivid portrait of the fear, destruction, stereotypes and complexity of the reality facing individuals on all sides of the conflict.

This book makes you think about the reality of the situation in the multi-dimensional and complex way the situation deserves, not in the black and white, one dimensional sound bites that generally surround us. For me, the most powerful moment in the book was Amin's reflection on something his father told him when he was a child "There's nothing, absolutely nothing, more important than your life. And your life isn't more important than other people's lives." Too bad, this couldn't be at the core of more people on all sides of this conflict.
68 people found this helpful
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An impressive achievement

Amin Jaafari is a hard-working and talented surgeon at a busy Tel Aviv hospital, two generations away from his Arab origins. He is wealthy, popular with his Jewish colleagues, and devoted to his wife Sihem. The novel opens with Amin taking charge of the chaos in the emergency room after a suicide bomber attacks a restaurant in the Hakirya district of Tel Aviv, killing 19 people including a group of schoolchildren at a birthday party. Subsequently Amin is stopped and searched four times by Israeli policemen on the way home. He only wakes up to his own misfortune when he learns that Sihem has been killed in the bombing and that her wounds correspond to those found on suicide bombers.
Amin refuses to believe that Sihem could have committed such an act of terror. He expects her to return soon from Kfar Kanna where she is visiting her old grandmother. Disbelief gives way to horror when Sihem's last letter, posted from Bethlehem, turns up in his post box. As a consequence of Sihem's attack Amin's life, ambition, values and friendships disintegrate. He locks himself up in a nightmare of drink and despair in which he reflects on every aspect of his life, nationality and marriage. A Jewish colleague, Kim Yehuda, calls Amin back from the brink. He retraces Sihem's last journey from Tel Aviv to Bethlehem and back again. There Amin is repeatedly beaten up: by the Shin Bet, his Tel Aviv neighbours and Palestinian militants in the West Bank towns of Bethlehem and Jenin that were under siege by the Israeli army. Nevertheless he clings to his belief that as a surgeon his fight consists in recreating life in the place where death has chosen to conduct its manoeuvres.
The Attack uses both suicide bombing and the fate of many Israeli citizens who are of Arab origin. These are the descendants of the Arabs who stayed in the country rather than go into exile at the formation of Israel in 1948. Like Amin Jaafari in the story, they have suffered discrimination and mistreatment but have also prospered, and are now squeezed between an tormented Jewish state and their rebel fellow Arabs in Gaza and on the West Bank.
21 people found this helpful
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Disappointing

I'm unclear as to why everyone is raving about this book. I found myself skipping paragraphs, dismayed by cliches in copy (he actually used "avoided like the plague") and character (the seemingly content woman who finds the need to make her life mean so much more).
Make no mistake about it. While this book offers the pretense of providing deep insight into a complex situation (I hate the arrogance of this in any writer) and claims to show two sides of the troubles in Israel, it is extremely pro-Palestinian.
10 people found this helpful
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The Palestinian Paradox

As a work of fiction, it's extremely well done. Politically, it descends ultimately into a predictable piece of one-sided cant. Is there ever any justification for suicide bombing of innocent people? Or, as the book silently suggests, are Jews really guilty merely by the fact of being Jews? This is not a new argument-- in fact, it's 2000 years old. A brilliant Palestinian doctor in Israel, madely in love with his wife, has to go identify the body of a suicide-bombing perpetrator. He recognizes his adored and pampered wife, whom he has left just that morning with a kiss to begin what is seemingly another routine day in the hospital where he works. He has numerous professional Jewish Israeli friends and has received honors from Israel for his work.

Upon the shocking discovery that the bomber is his own wife, he embarks on a personal mission to find out why his wife would do such a thing. He finally locates some of her relatives and associates in the Arab territories of Israel, and begins to see through their lens what would ultimately drive a seemingly gentle, upper middle class woman into such a depraved act. Or so the book argues. If you buy this argument, then the overt propaganda is successful. You're better off reading some real history. The abnormal psychology of the present islamic cult of death ought to be what is condemned here, but instead it is glorified, even justified, in an insane world where good is called evil and evil is called good . Enough said.
9 people found this helpful
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Con Protagonist

Protagonist, Amin Jaafari, a doctor, works as a surgeon at a hospital in Tel Aviv. He's an Arab-Israeli citizen, a secular man who seems to have more or less abandoned or neglected his religious roots and heritage and focused more on his profession and life in Israel. He doesn't contemplate his past, his history, his family, or his friends in Palestine. He has set himself apart from the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians, content to have his place, his things, his tranquility.

One night there's an attack --- a suicide bomber --- and consequently injured people and bodies start arriving at the hospital. Dr. Jaafari is busy assessing the injured and giving needed assistance. One Jewish man, recognizing Jaafari as an Arab, says he doesn't want Jaafari to treat him.

Jaafari finally goes home to sleep the work off and await the return of his wife, who has ostensibly taken a journey to visit family and friends in Palestine.

Before he catches up on his sleep and welcomes his wife home though, he's retrieved by officials and taken back to the hospital where he's told to look at a body. The authorities believe it's his wife; all indications are that she was the suicide bomber.

Dr. Jaafari is incredulous. At first the authorities suspect he might have known about the attack and might be complicit. Ultimately, they decide he's innnocent.

The rest of the book is about Jaafari trying to figure out how or why his wife would do such a grotesque thing: killing innocents, in particular, children.

There are a couple of things in that endeavor that put me off.

Jaafari elevated his suspicion that his wife was having an affair and his need to find out the details about it above and beyond his need to find out why she had become a suicide bomber. Infidelity is commonplace everywhere in the world, even among Arabs and Palestinians. Suicide bombing and killing innocents is not. Even when Jaafari realizes that his wife didn't have an affair he says, " . . .it makes me very angry to think that she preferred a set of fundamentalists to me. And my anger doubles when I consider how I was taken in. . . ."

It is all about him! Her effect upon him. It is an ugly and profane picture of a self-centered man. Jaafari's sense of priorities is skewed. He is a severely flawed protagonist and doesn't ever seem redeemed from it.

The other flaw in Jaafari that bothered me was his persistence in pursuing information about his deceased wife even when it was imprudent to do so. It isn't like he could be ignorant of their respective heritages or of what he and his wife had learned and experienced as youth growing up Palestinian in dire circumstances of their old world. His wife is presented as regularly going home to visit her family. Such ignorance in Dr. Jaafari seemed inconsistent with his education, career, and the earlier character development of him in the story.

The author established Jaafari as an individual worried about giving care and comfort as a doctor. Yet he surrendered what he could do to help out to simply try and find out how his wife had betrayed him and others. He was so self-centered , and he was so inconsistent with the character developed early-on as one inclined to serving and healing others.

I didn't find Jaafari likable. Early on he observed: "However great the damage may be, no cataclysm is going to keep the world from turning."

It was not true, and he found that out.
6 people found this helpful
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Beautiful Book About Love, Loss, And The Choices We Make

"When horror strikes, the heart is always its first target," (pg 13). This is never more true for Dr. Amin Jaafari when he finally accepts that his wife, Sihem, is responsible for the latest suicide bombing.

The Jaafari's are naturalized Israeli citizens who have left the ravages of Palestine for a comfortable life in Tel Aviv. Amin states, "I ddin't need to be a conscientious objector to distrust poliicies requiring armed struggle and sermons based on hatred. Gazing upon Jerusalem's sacred structures was enough to persuade me to oppose everything that might injure the enduring grandeur," (pg 142). Thus, Amin makes the deliberate decision to save lives rather than desroy them, fights prejudice on a daily basis, and becomes a renowned surgeon.

One day, while Amir is at work, the hospital becomes flooded with victims from a suicide bombing. The bomber walked into a restaurant where children were celebrating a friend's birthday and kills seventeen people. After frantically saving as many lives as possible Amir goes home exhausted only to receive a phone call to return to the hospital. Once there he is forced to identify the destroyed remains of his wife.

Never suspecting his wife's involvement in terrorist activities, Amir is devastated. He treasured his wife and is haunted by the missed signs that she was descending into this world. Receiving a letter from his wife postmarked the day of the attack, Amin sets out to discover how this journey to destruction could have escaped him and ultimately bringing him face to face with his own history.

There are a 1001 ways this premise could have gone wrong. While I'm not sure how I feel about some of Khadra's choices, there are some things I really appreciated. First, Khadra does an excellent job of providing insight into the daily lives of Israelis and Palestinians. Second, he beautifully captures the anguish jihadists leave family members with both in terms of grief over the loss of loved ones and the retribution enacted upon survivors. Finally, he shows that there is a choice in which path you follow.

If you are new to Khadra's work, Yasmina Khadra is a nome de plume for Mohammed Moulessehoul, who began writing under his wife's name when the Algerian army demanded review of his work before publishing. Moulessehoul was an Algerian Army Officer.
2 people found this helpful
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Fiction describing the Truth and Pain - just like a true story!

In THE ATTACK, which viscerally details the prolonged detonation of just such a bombing, Yasmina Khadra has taken the brave (perhaps even brazen) approach of turning the wretchedness of generations-old enmity into very personalized fiction. The book does not take any particular sides; it merely lays out events and lets readers form their own opinion on each scenario.

Even though, this book is a fiction, many readers can think this book "based on a true story" because of the way the writer described the pain and truth. Even the characters like Sihem, or her loving husband Amin who cannot get over his sudden loss, so strong is his love for her, as well as his confusion over the whole issue, seemed to be real - forces me to identify with them while they breathe life into the novel, yet also at the same time making the story all the more tragic because of that very authenticity factor.

Definitely this book is highly recommended and you will enjoy every minute of it.
2 people found this helpful
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A short, powerful, extraordinarily well-written book

Yasmina Khadra is the nom de plume of Mohammed Moulessehoul. This Algerian army officer wrote under this female name because he feared censorship due to his position. He revealed himself in 2001 after an already impressive body of work.

What can I say that the others reviewers haven't already said? "The Attack" is a short, powerful, extraordinarily well-written book. Protagonist Amin Jaafari, an Arab surgeon raised within Israel's borders, has worked hard to overcome stereotypes throughout his career. He's obtained his surgical residency and is by all accounts a top-notch emergency room doctor. Now, his wife is slowly revealed to be a suicide bomber, a fact he cannnot get his arms around. As the facts and evidence pile up, the latent feelings of his peers rise quickly to the surface.

Writer Moulessehoul takes us on chilling trips into Jenin and Ramallah. The details of these gripping passages tell me that the book could not have been written without the author himself walking those same steps. These are the best parts of a uniformly outstanding novel.
2 people found this helpful
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5 stars is not enough!!

This is not the type of novel that I would typically read. But in reading reviews on books, I was drawn by the premise of a female suicide bomber and decided to check it out. I was blown away!! From page one until the very end i was engrossed. The novel is well written and gives the reader a view into the bomber's life as opposed to the lives of victims and a desperate search from a clueless husband's to figure out what went wrong. It is a tragic story from beginning to end, but vert insightful and WELL worth your time.
2 people found this helpful
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Gripping read.

This is such an amazing book! It starts off with a suicide bombing attack and bring the reader along for a gripping tale. It's been a while since I've actually read it, so I don't remember a lot of the details, which is probably for the best. I wouldn't want to risk ruining it for you. I do remember it was an awesome read though, so pick up a copy. Trust me- you'll enjoy it.
1 people found this helpful