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Awards
OverviewWith irony and poignant teenage idealism, Butterfly draws us into her world of adult hypocrisy, sibling rivalries, girlfriends' power plays, unrequited love...not to mention the political tension of life under occupation. As she observes her fragile environment with all its conflicts, Butterfly is compelled to question everything around her. Is her father a collaborator for the occupiers? Will Nizar ever give her the sign she's waiting for? How will her friendship with the activist Mays and the airhead Haya survive the unpredictable storms ahead? And why is 'honour' such a dangerous word, anyway? Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ahlam Bsharat , Nancy RobertsPublisher: Neem Tree Press Limited Imprint: Neem Tree Press Limited ISBN: 9781911107033ISBN 10: 1911107038 Pages: 97 Publication Date: 08 March 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'We look out through the eyes of a 14 or 15-year-old girl who doesn't know what to think about her eyebrows, much less the two-state solution. We, like her, must start over with new vocabulary. Indeed, if Butterfly has a superpower, it's her mastery of the power of questions. ... the book's questions strip not just Butterfly of certainty but also the reader, making it a valuable read for a teen or adult.' -- Marcia Lynx Qualey * The National * 'A well-written and thoughtful attempt to tease out the complex inner life of a Palestinian girl as she interacts with her family and friends ... Highly recommended not just for teenagers and young adults but for readers of all ages.' -- US High School Teacher '... powerful short novel ... beautiful, descriptive prose ... searingly honest and brave portrayal of the harsh realities of life living under occupation seen through the eyes of the young protagonist who is trying hard to make sense of it all.' -- Outside In World-Exploring World Books 'The best Arab young adult novel, hands down. And like all the best literary characters, our heroine is likeable but also complex and flawed.' -- Researcher in Children's Fiction, Glasgow University; former Anna Lindh Foundation employee '... the personal squabbles and betrayals at the heart of this novel make for a fascinating and enlightening read.' -- The Pirate Tree: Social Justice and Children's Literature Bsharat is a Palestinian writer, and in Code Name: Butterfly she conjures up a teenage girl living under the Israeli occupation. In some ways 'Butterfly' (not her real name) is just like any other teenager, complex and dramatic, with many of the same preoccupations (friendship, rivalry, family tensions, impossible dreams), but the harsh political and social conditions in which she lives are quite unlike anything most of the book's readers will recognize. Enlightening, funny and affecting, Code Name: Butterfly is a brief story that packs quite a punch. -- Riveting Reads, A World of Books In Translation, School Library Association 'Like many adolescents, she feels unable to talk to her parents, her siblings or friends, and so stores her questions and dreams in an imaginary treasure chest, which she declares almost full to bursting point. Herein lies the sadness: her questions are neither asked nor answered and her dreams are never shared, but by the end of the novel she realizes that grown-ups do not have all the answers and maybe more importantly, that they themselves have many unanswered questions of their own ... her observations of life under... occupation are often both astute and amusing, and the butterfly motif employed throughout demonstrates perfectly the journey of a teenager moving towards adulthood, growing in strength and resilience, turning metaphorically from an ugly caterpillar into a beautiful butterfly.' -- National Centre for Research In Children's Literature (NCRCL) blog at Roehampton University, London Code Name: Butterfly contains five vignettes that span a crucial year in its protagonist's life, as she turns from a girl to a woman, falls in love for the first time, and has her heart broken-more than once. Her personal story is inseparable from the story of her village, where martyrdom is a fact of life and can happen from a car accident as easily as from an Israeli bullet ... Code Name: Butterfly is one of the few YA novels available in English that presents life under occupation from the perspective of a Palestinian writer. The unusual style, more summary than scene, works because Bsharat draws readers into the lives of her protagonist, her family, and her friends, revealing the contradictions and conflicts of living under occupation. As Butterfly's beloved Baba points out, the villagers are often their own worst enemies, and the personal squabbles and betrayals at the heart of this novel make for a fascinating and enlightening read. A useful glossary defines Arabic words used in the text and summarizes the key historical events that affect the characters' present-day lives. Code Name: Butterfly was named to the 2012 IBBY Honour List of outstanding books, selected from publications in more than 70 countries. -- The Pirate Tree: Social Justice and Children's Literature 'A beautiful coming of age tale, and a compelling account of the injustices faced by those living under occupation. Highly recommended.' -- Literacy volunteer at UK charity Beanstalk 'A beautiful, astounding book that daringly, yet seamlessly blends the dreamy world of adolescence with the tough questions it brings. Code Name: Butterfly speaks with intelligence, wit and irony about the injustices and implications of occupation.' -- Chairman, The International Board on Books for Young People Palestine Chapter Author InformationAhlam Bsharat grew up in Tammun in Palestine and now lives in Ramallah. Following a Master's Degree in Arabic, she worked as a teacher for several years. An award-winning author of poetry, picture books, short stories, novels, memoirs, and TV and radio scripts, she also works for the Ministry of Culture in Ramallah. Her literary craft has taken her to Belgium and France, where she was artist in residence. Nancy Roberts is an Arabic-to-English literary translator whose translations include Salwa Bakr's The Man From Bashmour, for which she received a commendation in the Saif Ghobash-Banipal Prize for Translation, Ezzat El Kamhawi's prize-winning House of the Wolf, Laila Aljohani's Days of Ignorance and Ahlem Mosteghanemi's The Dust of Promises and Chaos of the Sses. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |