BOOKMONGER Global crisis through the eyes of a child Book exposes ‘utterly insufficient humanity’ In 2015, when a boat carrying Syr- the island for several generations, so ian refugees bound for Europe fell she feels like something of an outsider apart in the stormy Mediterranean Sea herself. and most of those aboard drowned, The story unspools in alternating the body of a little boy washed up on chapters. One strand covers the life a Turkish beach. When the photo of story of young Amir and how he winds 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi’s lifeless form up on that fateful voyage. The other was flashed around the world, there piece focuses on the desperate maneu- vers of Vanna and Amir as they try to was a collective gasp of horror. But the attention was short-lived, avoid capture by Kethros and his men. even though the humanitarian crisis Some have likened El Akkad’s story continues to this day. In the last eight to the Peter Pan trope. Vanna might years alone, according to the Missing be seen as the maternal Wendy figure Migrants Project, more than 21,000 and, with his prosthetic leg and relent- less drive, Kethros is indeed a fear- people have drowned in the Mediter- some answer to Captain ranean while trying to Hook. escape the conflict and WHILE THIS But in his young life poverty in their home- NOVEL lands in Africa and the as a refugee, Amir has SUGGESTS Middle East. always been a follower THAT THERE Portland author by default, not a leader Omar El Akkad is not like Peter Pan. MAY BE going to let us look Buffeted by the cruel EMBERS OF away. In “What Strange blows of geopolitical COMPASSION Paradise,” his latest happenstance, he has IN US ALL, IT novel, the central char- had little agency. ALSO EXPOSES acter is a Syrian kid, And when one cyni- THE UTTERLY cal guide along the way Amir, who at 9 years old is the age Aylan INSUFFICIENT spits out, “You thought was enough. But would have been today HUMANITY OF away it’s not. It never is,” had he survived. HUMANITY IN who is Amir to argue? Amir looks younger THE SYSTEMS than his years. His fam- “What Strange Par- WE’VE BUILT adise” is no allegory. It ily had tried to reset- tle in Egypt, but now he TO DEAL WITH is the bitter truth, hap- pening right now, not appears to be the lone THE GLOBAL just in the Mediterra- survivor after a boat- MIGRATION nean, but also down load of refugees cap- CRISIS. sizes off the Greek along the Rio Grande island of Kos. and in so many other Like other countries along the border regions around the world. northern Mediterranean coastline, El Akkad writes with heart-sear- ing intensity. While this novel suggests Greece has been grappling with the that there may be embers of compas- influx of undocumented immigrants. sion in us all, it also exposes the utterly The Greek army has dispatched sol- diers under the command of Col. Dim- insufficient humanity of humanity in itri Kethros to round up any refugees the systems we’ve built to deal with who make it to Kos. the global migration crisis. Amir, however, eludes their grasp The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd with the help of 15-year-old Vanna. McMichael, who writes this weekly Although island-born, Vanna is the column focusing on the books, authors granddaughter of Swedish immigrants and publishers of the Pacific North- west. Contact her at barbaralmcm@ in a place where — to be truly local gmail.com. — one’s family has to have been on 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM This week’s book ‘What Strange Paradise’ by Omar El Akkad Knopf – 256 pp — $26