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BOOK
REVIEW - Pillars of Salt
A gripping tale of woe, love, lust, and insanity, set in the backdrop
of an Arab world.
By
JAMIE THORNTON, Staff Writer
“… I will recount
to you an horrific story…unfold the multi-layered secrets of both
past and present,” and this is exactly what Fadia Faqir does in
her fiction novel, Pillars of Salt. The first chapter begins from the
point of view of the ‘best story-teller in Arabia’ yet it
is actually a story about two women who are committed to an insane asylum
in Jordan and why they were sent there. But do not think that this novel
is about mental psychosis or conditions in foreign mental hospitals. Fadia
Faqir’s novel is a heart wrenching tale about two women stripped
of their humanity based solely on the fact that they were born female
and stood in the way of something that a male in their lives wanted.
Maha, the main character in the novel, shares her story about a beautiful
love with her husband -and eventually child, - in the midst of the British
Mandate. This political war ultimately kills her husband and leaves Maha
and child in the hands of her violent and hateful brother. After the death
of her father, Maha’s brother has complete control over Maha’s
physical life and exerts this power at the first sign of her desire to
control her and her child’s fate. The point of view switches from
her to the storyteller who gives another perspective on Maha’s story
and paints her as Jordan society would: he patronizes her every action
with the idea that as a female she was born as though she was evil incarnate.
Um Saad shares a room with Maha in the mental hospital and shares her
life story with Maha; Um Saad, who bore many sons for her husband, becomes
old, like him, but also becomes worthless in her husband’s eyes
so he replaces her with a younger wife. Um Saad’s children begin
treating her like a lowly servant in her own house until her husband finally
commits her to the insane asylum.
Yet all of these events are known almost immediately and so the true heart
of the story rests in experiencing every aspect of these two women’s
lives and what it took to make these strong, self-possessed women into
broken heaps of pain, despair and outrage. Neither woman survives the
repression nor subjugation that constitutes daily life for the majority
of Arab women, - yet the author manages to convey the idea that these
women share their stories for the next generation in hopes that something
will change.
Fadia Faqir writes a vivid story rooted in the ancient tradition of Arabian
storytelling. She breathes life into her characters from the very first
page and creates enough suspense to make the book impossible to put down;
the heat, the sand, the orange trees, the young, almost naïve love
between Maha and her husband turn the story into one that won’t
be forgotten.
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