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Children's Literature
Netta Hofman's 17 year old brother Adam is missing in Los Angeles, and she begins to think that his pro-Israel rhetoric has gotten him kidnapped by Palestinians. Netta sets out to find her brother by recreating his contacts in the "dialogue" community, both online and at school. Along the way Netta, who is Israeli, meets and reluctantly befriends Laith, a Palestinian exchange student, and they realize that despite their opposite views on statehood rights in their respective homelands, they have more in common with each other than with the Americans around them. Admirers of Habibi by Naomi Shihab Nye might have hoped to have found a mirror story in this one, but will be disappointed in many respects. Although the author tries to eliminate bias by giving voice to both political views, her characters do not fully breathe life into them. Perhaps due to the crisis unfolding in the story, the characters are never fully developed. One might also feel tricked by the irony-laden ending of the story, in which the jungle of the American city is the true villain. Educators should be cautioned against using this book in curriculum due to a few peculiar factual errors. To begin, "intifada" is translated as "Palestinian underground" when it is commonly known to mean "popular uprising" or "resistance". Ramallah is said to be the "headquarters of this Palestinian underground," when actually it is the seat of the Palestinian government, to date. 2003, Eerdmans Books,— Kate Pourshariati