إلى أفضل أم على الإطلاق بقلم ايزوبيل كارلسون ... الأمومة أكثر من مجرد خلق حياة جديدة، فهي تعني منح نعمة حب هائل لإنسان آخر، حب يختلف عن أي حب آخر. يتفتح هذا الحب في الأيام القليلة الأولى من حياة طفلك ويبدو كأنه لا يمكن أن يزداد قوة. ولكنه حب لا يتوقف أبداً عن النمو.
Khalifa Al-Khader, winner of the Samir Kassir Award for Freedom of the Press 2017, writes some scenes of fear in the details of his experience in ISIS prisons in the city of Al-Bab, his escape from prison, and his subsequent return to it of his own free will after ISIS was expelled from the city.
Khalifa does not tell us about ISIS from the outside. He lived in the belly of the ghoul, and went out to narrate some of what he saw, heard, and lived...
“Sarrah” is an immigrant in Sweden. Since the start of the war in her country, she has been unable to write. She seeks to seize the key to freedom of expression, but she faces locks. She works with an autistic child, whose father, Gibran, works in a library and fights discrimination, but he still finds himself in dark basements.
“Gibran” longs for “Sarrah,” and she longs for writing, remembering her days in Hama, and her ambition to find peace.
In this novel, Manhal Al-Sarraj tells us, in a different style of narration and writing, the story of Syrian immigrants in Sweden, their circumstances, and the fragmentation of their relationships, and quietly scatters reflections on existence, life, trust, love, and peace.
The book addresses some of the financial issues prevalent in our society in a short collection of true stories to educate and educate individuals. It begins with a conflict between “reason” and “society” over the group of creditors drowning in a swamp of debt, where “society” ignores the circumstances of that group while “reason” goes on a short trip to find out their stories and what their circumstances are, then offers solutions to the creditors, and benefits from the experiences of those who survived them in order to prove Society has the idea that these individuals are capable of change and emerge from the darkness of debt into the light of success, eventually calling them “reasonable spendthrifts.”