In contemporary Damascus an Arab teenager writes in his journal about himself, his family, his friends, and his love while in the background, government terror mounts, coup follows coup, and he is drawn into secret and dangerous resistance. Normal life comes to include panzer tanks in the street; friends are tortured, but the narrator and a few companions find the courage to write and distribute an underground newspaper. Schami (a Syrian now living in Germany) is careful not to exploit the violence. With warmth and comedy, the journal entries focus on the characters on the boy's narrow street, where poverty smothers our dreams (his father forces him to leave school and work in his bakery), but there's a rich, vital, multicultural community. The narrator's family is Catholic, his best friend is Muslim, the barber is Armenian, the assistant comes from Persia, and the boy's beloved elderly mentor tells him stories from everywhere history, legend, and fable These stories persist, and we live in their midst. (Gr. 7-10) Booklist This unusual novel, written in the form of a diary, tells the story of four years in the life of a Damascene boy. This multifaceted work is at once a glimpse into a different culture, a plea for the right to free speech and a highly readable tale, as full of fun as it is of melancholy.
(Ages 12-up) --Publishers Weekly.