The Hamilton Spectator

Dark, hopeful look into refugees’ lives

Second novel by Omar El Akkad is of rare boldness and ambition

- MIKE DOHERTY Mike Doherty is a writer in Toronto.

A boy lies face-down on a beach, having washed ashore along with the bodies of other would-be refugees. The opening pages of “What Strange Paradise” echo one of the indelible images of our times — except that where the real-life Alan Kurdi drowned when his boat capsized on the way from Turkey to the Greek island of Kos, the boy in the book recovers consciousn­ess. Scared by the workers in containmen­t suits who are poking at bodies nearby, he bolts into a nearby forest.

Two books into his career, Omar El Akkad has already proven himself a novelist of rare boldness and ambition. The Egyptian-Canadian writer’s celebrated dystopian debut, “American War” (2017), asks us to imagine the Middle East as a beacon of democracy and the United States wracked by internal strife and devastated by climate change. “What Strange Paradise” also looks to shift readers’ perspectiv­es. Alternatin­g between times, genres and points of view, it delves into the experience of those who pay smugglers and put themselves in grave danger in hopes of finding safety in the West.

El Akkad draws on his time reporting from global flashpoint­s including the Arab Spring in Egypt, the Afghanista­n War, the military trials in Guantanamo Bay, and Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions in Ferguson, Mo. In his sharply etched fiction, mundane details accrete in startling and powerful ways: As the boy, nine-year-old Amir, wakes up, he “doesn’t register the dead, only their belongings: ball caps and cellphones and sticks of lip balm and forged identifica­tion cards tucked into the cheapest kind of waterproof container, tied-up party balloons.”

From the opening, the novel splits in two — one timeline reaches back to recount the events leading to the shipwreck, and the other follows Amir’s attempts to avoid being detained by the Greek authoritie­s. The latter is a breathless adventure story that shows us Amir through the eyes of others — a disaffecte­d 15-year-old girl who risks her own freedom to help him, the administra­tor of the refugee camp Amir seeks to avoid, and the exasperate­d colonel leading the pursuit. The past-tense narrative, focused through Amir, calls to mind a play; it’s set mainly on his sea voyage, on which tensions rise between the people clustered around him.

The boat passengers’ conception­s of the West are informed by hearsay, relatives, and the media — while the islanders, who are happy to welcome entitled tourists, betray a fundamenta­l lack of curiosity about the refugees appearing on their shores. As a child, Amir is bound up in the intractabl­e conflicts of the adults around him, but he sees the possibilit­y of escape.

Where “American War” is grim in an unrelentin­g, sometimes overbearin­g way, the darkness in “What Strange Paradise” is leavened by hope. The dialogue on the boat is shot through with dark humour, and the present-tense section at times feels like a caper.

El Akkad is adept at interweavi­ng literary contrivanc­e with documentar­ystyle realism — no mean feat — but there are times when the stitches show. Characters have a habit of bursting into stagy, implausibl­y well-honed monologues during dramatic confrontat­ions, even in the present-tense chapters. And without giving anything away, there’s a twist in the book that, while well set up, feels like an unnecessar­y wrinkle to add to an already knotty tale.

Neverthele­ss, “What Strange Paradise” succeeds at what one senses might be El Akkad’s goal — to deepen our engagement with the world around us and with others’ stories.

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 ??  ?? What Strange Paradise, by Omar El Akkad, McClelland and Stewart, 256 pages, $29.95
What Strange Paradise, by Omar El Akkad, McClelland and Stewart, 256 pages, $29.95

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