Hotline

Dimitri Nasrallah
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Hotline

Dimitri Nasrallah
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“Nasrallah’s fourth novel, it takes his work to a new level of sophistication and constitutes a significant addition to the literary chronicling of the Canadian immigrant experience.” – Ian McGillis, Montreal Gazette

Hotline intertwines hope and sorrow to create a moving story that sears the heart.” - Zeahaa Rehman, Quill & Quire

“I admire how Nasrallah plumbs new territory with each novel. That said, underlying themes and concerns thread through his oeuvre, such as emotional and geographic exile and family." - Ami Sands Brodoff, Montreal Review of Books

“A quietly transformative story, one that takes your assumptions, twists them into a shape you didn’t initially see and casts them back at you in a really lovely way.” - Alison Manley, Miramichi Reader

"Fiction about immigrants tends toward melancholy and tragedy. Dimitri Nasrallah’s new novel delivers something different. Hotline suggests that immigrant literature may be able to navigate its own course between the Scylla of despair and the Charybdis of naïveté. The problems of bootstraps narratives aside, happy endings are still worth writing." – Amanda Perry, The Walrus

Overall rating: 4.285714 / 5 from 14 reviews.

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Review topics: ["story","read","book"].

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Reviews

Moving and Meaningful

"I was easily able to connect to the characters that reminded me of refugees and recent immigrants in my own life. Despite the struggles of Muna, the main character, the story is hopeful. The 80s nostalgia was prominent in the novel."

Justin (5/5)

Canada Reads contender!

"You can see why this book was a great choice for Canada Reads. Engaging story, reflecting the realities of the newcomer experience. Highly recommend."

Halifax M. (5/5)

Well written and thought out.

"This is a slow read. While it covers the challenges faced by immigrants to Canada well, it drags in the first half."

J B. (3/5)

Hotline

"Well written. The author engages the reader with his story."

Gisele28 (5/5)

It is a title that becomes more significant as the story progresses which is not obvious at the beginning.

"This is a humorous & poignant story about a single mother & her young son & their experiences as new immigrants to Quebec / Montreal. It is easy to read & engages the reader immediately into a life that is challenging for a women seeking employment & a sense of belonging to a new life. I enjoyed it. It is not a ´ classic’ but it tells a story everyone should understand."

Alison (3/5)

Hotline a story of hope and perseverance

"Even though this was fiction the author based it on his mother's life. It is as true today as it based an immigrant's unique story. I found t It interesting that it was written by a man from the voice of a woman."

Lisa R. (5/5)

Five stars

"An immigrant mother’s story about moving to Canada under tragic circumstances. Heartwarming"

Adol (5/5)

Great read!

"Excellent portrayal of the new immigrant experience and the challenges that we all often overlook. Excellent characters and story telling!"

Aminah (3/5)

Change of perspective

"Loved the perspective from a new Canadian trying to make her way in 80s Quebec. Made me feel guilty for complaining, which is a good thing. Perspective."

Brooke P. (5/5)

A Little too ""Feel Good"" to be Accurate

"This is the story of Muna, a refugee who has come to Montreal from Lebanon with her young son. Her husband has been kidnapped and is presumed dead. The book tells of the challenges Muna faces in finding a job and a place to live. Though a qualified teacher and fluent in French, the best job Muna can secure is at a weight-loss company's call centre. As we follow Muna in her first year in Canada, we share her struggles and successes. She is a strong character and I enjoyed getting to know her. That said, the book was a bit light in exploring Muna's challenges and her feelings about the husband she left behind. It didn't really show the ugly side of racism and the despair a single mother would feel at leaving her child alone when he is ill. It's a little too ""feel good"" to be an accurate portrayal, I think."

LynnB (3/5)

Q&A

  • Date de publication : Mar 01, 2022
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 278
  • Éditeur : Vehicule Press
  • ISBN : 9781550655940
  • Dimensions : 5.0" W x 0.5" L x 7.5" H

Dimitri Nasrallah is the author of four novels. He was born in Lebanon in 1977, and lived in Kuwait, Greece, and Dubai before moving to Canada. His internationally acclaimed books have garnered nominations for CBC Canada Reads, the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, and the Grand Prix du Livre de Montréal, and won the Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and the McAuslan First Book Prize. He is the fiction editor at Véhicule Press.

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