![]() ![]() They evade boredom and sharks and hunger on the week-long voyage to Australia, only to be devastated by a typhoon. Next, there is a late-night summons to a fishing boat where they are crowded aboard with their new friend, Nasima, and family. Then there is their first airplane ride, to Jakarta, where they try papayas, rambutan and jackfruit, and Firuzeh becomes violently ill. ![]() And living’s harder.”įirst, there is the terror of crossing the border into Pakistan, with only a name and number of a man they have given their life savings to in exchange for documents and plane tickets. “Telling stories is difficult,” Firuzeh says to Nour, “Even when you know how they should end. But over time, as the children experience the hardships and challenges of being unwanted immigrants, their patience for these stories wanes. Atay’s familiar tales of Rostam and his brave and faithful steed, Rakhsh, who fought lions and dragons and had marvelous adventures, are meant as a comfort and a distraction. Yu weaves poetry, folklore and simple, direct dialogue into a mesmerizing story that is timeless and yet of this time.įiruzeh and her brother, Nour, are of an age where they still adore their father’s gentle storytelling when they first leave Kabul, Afghanistan, for Pakistan on their way to Australia. Lily Yu’s astonishing novel “On Fragile Waves,” about two Afghan children whose family flees their war-torn home only to face an uncertain future in Australia. This year’s Washington State Book Award winner for fiction is E. ![]()
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