
Palestinian Walks Forays into a Vanishing Landscape
Reviews

the grief of watching a homeland be devoured and picked apart is so palpable, you can't help but grieve with him as you read.

The description of him running to catch the sunset not knowing it is the last time he will be allowed in that particular area hit so hard.

a difficult, infuriating read knowing the present, 16ish years after this book was published. place is so intrinsically political. sharp and grieving, tender and meditative, preserving lost land and paths in words.

3.5 rounded up An interesting look at Palestine over the last several decades. Instead of focusing on political arguments, or wading through complicated history, Shehadeh walks us through personal experience & the tangible changes that are reflected in a changing landscape. I really like this kind of personal history. Things meandered a bit, but so do walks, so I wasn't too bothered by it. Sticking with 3.5 instead of higher because it is a very limited scope, and while it was interesting it wasn't gripping. I don't think it needs to be, per se, but it wasn't a book that commandeered my attention.

