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The Night Counter: A Novel [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Alia Yunis (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Book Description

A Novel July 14, 2009
After 85 long years, Fatimah Abdullah is dying, and she knows when her time will come. In fact, it should come just nine days from tonight, the 992nd nightly visit of Scheherazade, the beautiful and immortal storyteller from the epic The Arabian Nights.

Just as Scheherazade spun magical stories for 1,001 nights to save her own life, Fatima has spent each night telling Scheherazade her life stories, all the while knowing that on the 1,001st night, her storytelling will end forever. But between tonight and night 1,001, Fatima has a few loose ends to tie up. She must find a wife for her openly gay grandson, teach Arabic (and birth control) to her 17-year-old great-granddaughter, make amends with her estranged husband, and decide which of her troublesome children should inherit her family's home in Lebanon--a house she herself has not seen in nearly 70 years. All this while under the surveillance of two bumbling FBI agents eager to uncover Al Qaeda in Los Angeles.

But Fatima’s children are wrapped up in their own chaotic lives and disinterested in their mother or their inheritances. As Fatima weaves the stories of her husband, children, and grandchildren, we meet a visionless psychic, a conflicted U.S. soldier, a gynecologist who has a daughter with a love of shoplifting and a tendency to get unexpectedly pregnant, a Harvard-educated alcoholic cab driver edging towards his fifth marriage, a lovelorn matchmaker, and a Texas homecoming queen. Taken in parts, Fatima’s relations are capricious and steadfast, affectionate and smothering, connected yet terribly alone. Taken all together, they present a striking and surprising tapestry of modern Arab American life.

Shifting between the U.S. and Lebanon over the last hundred years, Alia Yunis crafts a bewitching novel imbued with great humanity, imagination, and a touch of magic realism. Be prepared to be utterly charmed.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this captivating debut, Yunis takes readers on a magic carpet ride examining the lives of Fatima Abdullah and her huge dysfunctional family. Imitating Scheherazade, Fatima—in a clever twist—spins her own tales to the legendary storyteller. And she has plenty of material: Fatima is dying, and more interested in her prized possessions—including a house in Lebanon—than in reuniting her splintered offspring and her estranged husband, Ibraham, whose enduring love is proved in a neat twist at the end of the novel. Fatima's family is all over the country, all with issues, including daughter Laila battling breast cancer in Detroit, openly gay actor grandson Amir in Los Angeles and pregnant great-granddaughter Aisha in Minneapolis. Gradually, Fatima learns that her true treasure isn't the house in Lebanon that she's pined after for decades, but her imperfect, loving family. Add in a bumbling neophyte FBI agent seeing al-Qaeda smoke where there is no fire and the result is a sometimes serious, sometimes funny, but always touching tale of a Middle Eastern family putting down deep roots on U.S. soil. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Wonderfully imaginative…poignant, hilarious…The branches of this family tree support four generations of achievement, assimilation, disappointment, and dysfunction…Their stories form an affectionate, amusing, intensely human portrait of one family."
Boston Globe

"The Abdullahs are anything but a Norman Rockwell painting, but in their own way, they are a very typical American family. They may have their differences but they also have their stories. And, as Scheherazade points out, in the end, that's what holds a family (much like a nation) together."
Christian Science Monitor

"THE NIGHT COUNTER, Alia Yunis' first novel, mixes equal parts of magical realism, social commentary, family drama and lighthearted humor to create a delicious and intriguing indulgence worth savoring."
Minneapolis Star Tribune

"Yunis, a Chicago-born professor living in Abu Dhabi, weaves a colorful tapestry…rich in character and spirit."
Entertainment Weekly

"Little pigs and lost siblings make for decent bedtime story fodder. But the life and times of Fatima Abdullah, the madcap matriarch of Alia Yunis's charming debut, THE NIGHT COUNTER, is even better."
–Daily Candy

"In this captivating debut, Yunis takes readers on a magic carpet ride….[A] sometimes serious, sometimes funny, but always touching tale of a Middle Eastern family putting down deep roots on U.S. soil."
Publishers Weekly

"Yunis' book club-ready debut uses The Arabian Nights as a departure point for an immigrant-assimilation story....Emotionally rewarding reading that builds to a poignant and thoroughly satisfying climax."
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"Yunis' debut is a magical, whimsical read with plenty of humor and heart."
Booklist

"A vibrant, moving story that blurs the boundaries of dream and reality, past and present, innocence and wisdom."
–Laila Lalami, author of Secret Son

"An enchanting debut that winks and glitters like the bangles that line Scheherazade's arms. THE NIGHT COUNTER is funny, sly, charming, delicious, madcap -- and a gorgeous celebration of the way stories weave and shape our lives."
–Carolyn Turgeon, author of Godmother

"A gracefully-written multi-generational tale--warm, wise, and often funny--that reveals the inevitable illusions that push families apart, and hold them together."
–Will North, author of Water, Stone, Heart and The Long Walk Home

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Crown (July 14, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307453626
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307453624
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.4 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,068,669 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Born in Chicago, ALIA YUNIS is a PEN Emerging Voices Fellow. She has worked as a journalist and filmmaker in several countries. As the daughter of an environmental engineer and a UN diplomat, she grew up in the Midwest, particularly the Twin Cities, and in Beirut during the civil war, graduating from high school in Athens, Greece. She completed her undergraduate and graduate degrees at the University of Minnesota and American University in Washington, DC.

Her fiction has been published in several journals and anthologies, and her non-fiction work has appeared in a variety of publications, including the Los Angeles Times, Saveur, SportsTravel Magazine, and Aramco World. She has received awards for both her writing and film work.

Alia has read from her work at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, the Los Angeles Public Library, the West Hollywood Book Festival, and the World Stage. She has been awarded writing residencies at Hedgebrook and at the MacNamara Foundation in Maine. She currently teaches film and television at Zayed University in Abu Dhabi.

 

Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scheherazade with L.A. Lip, July 14, 2009
Scheherazade could learn a thing or two about storytelling from Alia Yunis, who uses the 1001 Nights conceit to tell the tale of Fatima Abdullah, an 85-year-old matriarch who trades beauty tips with Scheherazade as she counts down the nights she thinks she has left to live. Both Fatima and Scheherazade display a lot of L.A. lip, which is not surprising given that Yunis is a filmmaker from L.A. Fatima, a purple-haired Detroit Tigers fan, is a character hard to beat, but she gets competition from her highly dysfunctional family. How glad I was that I didn't have to wait 1001 nights to hear all their stories. But The Night Counter is more than a collection of wonderfully zany characters. It's also a cautionary tale about how living in the past can keep you from living in the present and how little families understand each other.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Lovely Take on Family Drama and a Wonderful Illumination of the Importance of Storytelling, July 20, 2009
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Night Counter: A Novel (Hardcover)
If Scheherazade, the famous narrator of 1001 Nights, gained immortality beyond the immortality of her words, how do you imagine she would spend her time? In her debut novel, THE NIGHT COUNTER, Alia Yunis writes that she would spend her time collecting more stories.

In this latest reimagining of Scheherazade, she is extracting 1,001 stories from Fatima Abdullah, an aging Lebanese woman living in Los Angeles with her grandson, Amir. Fatima is convinced she has just days to live, and she has a lot to accomplish in that time. She must decide which of her children will inherit the family home back in Lebanon, she must find a wife for Amir (who happens to be gay), she must teach her pregnant teenage great-granddaughter to read the Qur'an in Arabic, and she must keep Scheherazade happy with her stories of her family, including life with her two husbands, Marwan and Ibrahim, and their 10 children.

Fatima arrived in Michigan as a young bride. With no English she relied on her kind-hearted husband Marwan, who had been in the US for many years working at the Ford Motor Company. Tragically, after Fatima is finally getting comfortable in her new home and awaiting the birth of her first child, Marwan dies. Before Laila is born she marries Marwan's close friend Ibrahim, a man who makes her laugh. Ibrahim is a quiet and increasingly distant partner. Still, he raises Laila as his own, and he and Fatima have nine more children.

Decades later the Arab and Muslim communities of the US have grown larger, and Fatima's 10 children and many grandchildren are grown and scattered across the country (and even back in the Middle East). As she senses death approaching, the quirky yet traditional Fatima begins to plan for her family's future without her.

There are several sub-stories in the book. Readers meet all of Fatima's children and grandchildren, and they each get their own story as Scheherazade travels to each of them on her flying carpet. There are several mysteries in these pages as well: Why did Fatima recently divorce Ibrahim and move to California? Why are two shady figures and the FBI spying on the family? Is Scheherazade a figment of Fatima's imagination, or really the ghost of the legendary storyteller?

THE NIGHT COUNTER is sweet and charming and often quite funny, yet it packs an emotional punch at the end. Yunis mostly manages to keep track of her many characters and maintain the primacy of Fatima's story. But sometimes it feels like there is too much going on, and the story becomes cluttered. Still, Yunis, like Scheherazade, is a fantastic guide, and the book overall is a good one.

Fatima's family is intelligent and flawed, loving and sad, fearful and hopeful all at once. Though much of what they deal with is particular to immigrants and minority cultures, they are also just trying to find acceptance, happiness, success and unconditional love in the face of ordinary challenges. Family, love and loss, as well as national, ethnic and religious identity and assimilation, are the major themes here. THE NIGHT COUNTER is a lovely take on family drama and a wonderful illumination of the importance of storytelling.

--- Reviewed by Sarah Rachel Egelman
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Every page is either a good laugh or a good cry, March 15, 2010
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This review is from: The Night Counter: A Novel (Hardcover)
I was initially attracted to the cover, but when I started reading this, I couldn't stop. It's a very funny and very sad look at family tales and love stories--with the ever immortal and lovely Scherherzade of the 1001 Nights coming to modern Los Angeles to the crazy, mixed up world of an 85-year old lady counting down the last days of her life as she decides how to leave things with the four generations of her family now rooted in America. Told from several viewpoints, including that of a bumbling FBI agent, this is a gem of summer read or a rainy afternoon read--or just something to keep on hand because it's humanity will lift your spirits
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