The Beekeeper of Aleppo by Christy Leferti is the incredibly moving story of a man and his wife escaping from war-torn Syria to seek asylum in the United Kingdom. Told in a series of flashbacks, it has an almost dreamlike quality as we find out how Nuri (the beekeeper) and his wife Afra (an artist) lived a life full of joy and happiness in Aleppo, before the war tore their family apart. When a bomb kills their son and leaves Afra blind, they finally heed the call from Nuri's cousin, Mustafa, to leave the city and follow him to the UK. The journey they make is a hazardous one and full of horrific scenes as they cross the sea, reach a refugee camp, end up in an unsafe park where people are treated like cattle waiting for market, and deal with a people smuggler who is only out for what he can get. They are journeying both in the physical and mental sense - bottling up their grief and anger, and you can sense the madness that seems to be coming for them both, but especially Nuri. There is very little beauty in this tale and it is sometimes a challenge to keep on reading as it brings the life of a refugee into sharp focus - one minute everything is ticking along in your life as usual, the next, your world is completely turned upside down. The full gamut of human traits are on display - from kindness, cruelty and everything in-between. I did find the switching between different times and countries a little confusing initially, but once I realised what was going on, I found it an impelling read. Personally, I would have liked to have heard more from Afra, who was quietly stoical most of the time, but perhaps that's what the fragile Nuri needed - someone to anchor him back to reality. Maybe the current Covid-19 crisis across the world will help us all to appreciate the plight of asylum seekers and refugees striving to find a light in the darkness that has, through no fault of their own, overtaken their once tranquil lives. I read the audio edition, narrated by the wonderful Art Malik.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 384 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.00.
Formats available: print, audio download, audio CD, ebook.
No comments:
Post a Comment