Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Amazing Review of Amazing Book



If anybody want a free eBook copy, please get on to me, Paddy, at paddys_goodreads_email@yahoo.co.uk

eBook Review: The Almond Tree by Michelle Cohen Corasanti

By 
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Verdict: 5 Stars
As a book reviewer, I read a lot of content and I read most of it with a critical eye, looking for the finer points of the book to mention in my review and to help me determine its rating. It has been a very long time since a book pulled me in as far as The Almond Tree (Garnet Publishing) did, and an even longer time since a book has made me cry.
As an outsider to the situation between Israel and Palestine, it’s easy to fall victim to the ignorant belief that there are atrocities on both sides, that neither side’s leadership is innocent. But The Almond Tree doesn’t waste time in name calling or historical debate, it simply tells the story of one extraordinary family caught in the crossfire of politics and violence, a loving family that simply wants what every family around the world wants: a future for its children that doesn’t involve suffering.
Having lived his entire twelve years under Israeli occupation of his village, brilliant student Ichmad Hassid’s entire world explodes when his father is imprisoned for an act of so-called terrorism that he didn’t commit, and watches helplessly as soldiers blow up his house as punishment, leaving him as the man of the house to care for his mother and several younger siblings. Abandoning his schoolwork to take a labor job to feed them, Ichmad struggles against the hatred and violence of even his own countrymen, compounded by the foreign soldiers who torture the people both physically and emotionally.
Corasanti’s debut novel is an exercise in heartbreak, while demonstrating the hope and faith that people can cling to in the exercise of extreme suffering. It is an eye-opening glimpse into the other side of a story that so few people around the world get to learn.
The Almond Tree is available in print and digital from AmazonBarnes and NobleKobo, and more.
Mercy Pilkington (1146 Posts)
 is a young-adult author and a teacher in a correctional facility. She does not have a single textbook in her classroom. With the top-of-the-line technology at her disposal and the low reading ability of many of her students, there’s no need for standard paper texts. Instead she relies on e-readers, iPads, desktop PCs, Polycom video conferencing equipment for virtual field trips, live streaming for science demonstrations, and text-to-speech read-aloud software to teach English and science. Within the next ten years, public school classrooms across the country are going to look a lot more like Mercy’s classroom because the educational possibilities with these kinds of technologies are limitless. Have a question? Send an email to mercypilkington@yahoo.com

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