"Full of heart and resilience,
Water on Fire is a must-read memoir." –Book Riot, The Best New Nonfiction Books to Read This Month
"Poignant, thought-provoking...The author's prose is beautifully evocative." –
Kirkus Reviews "Deeply moving...An important, stirring memoir that effectively documents how the Lebanese Civil War impacted a child who grew up there during that time." –
Library Journal "How do we live with war or recover from war? And what if there is more than one war, or even a lifetime of war? There's an erudition that almost hides itself in this dazzling memoir as El-Ariss takes on these questions, and the result is an adventure among the myths that rule us, an education in Freud, and a dive into the idea of what it could mean to be traumatized and to heal. Deeply moving, funny, erudite, each page is honed to a careful edge–not an extra word. I was dazzled." –Alexander Chee, author of
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel "In this beautifully written book, Tarek El-Ariss takes his readers on a journey of discovery of one's identity, commitment to humanity, and sorrows and ambitions, drawing a vivid picture of life at war from Beirut to New York. A must-read book!" –Alaa Al Aswany, author of
The Yacoubian Building "
Water on Fire is not a common story of war, loss, displacement, and identity crises, as much as it is a way to trace their inheritance. Tarek El-Ariss tells us that 'cutting' and 'storytelling' are the same word in Arabic (qass), and discovers that the impossibility of mourning cannot be reconciled through mere descriptive remembering of events. Rather, this reconciliation demands recalling images and fictional characters from scattered books, where literature can make reality of geography, disorder, and vulnerability."
–Iman Mersal, author of
The Threshold: Poems "A beautiful and very moving book." –Abdellah Taïa, author of
A Country for Dying "I can see this little boy carrying water containers home, or swimming at the beautiful beach in Beirut. Playing in shorts or carrying his bag on the way to school. As I read his story, I can't help but wish for him to escape the bombs. Not only because I know this war, and this city, but also because I deeply understand how alone he feels under an abandoned sky. As an adult, Tarek El-Ariss will weave from his trauma, from this water and this fire, the words that tie in the solitude of a stranger in awe of reason with the joy of knowledge and discovery." –Hoda Barakat, author of
Voices of the Lost