A Sunday Times Best Humour Book of the Year 2017 How can you tell if your neighbour is speaking Muslim? Is a mosque a kind of hedgehog? Can I get fries with that burka? You can’t trust the media any longer, but there’s no need to fret: Don’t Panic, I’m Islamic: Words and Pictures on How to Stop Worrying and Learn to Love the Alien Next Door provides you with the answers. Read this book to learn how you too can spot an elusive Islamist. Discover how Arabs (even 21-year-old, largely innocuous and totally adorable ones) plant bombs and get tips about how to interact with Homeland Security, which may or may not involve funny discussions about your sexuality. Commissioned in response to the US travel ban, Don’t Panic, I’m Islamic includes cartoons, graffiti, photography, colouring in pages, memoir, short stories and more by 34 contributors from around the world. Provocative and at times laugh-out-loud funny, these subversive pieces are an explosion of expression, creativity and colour. Contributors: Hassan Abdulrazzak, Leila Aboulela, Amrou Al-Kadhi, Shadi Alzaqzouq, Chant Avedissian, Tammam Azzam, Bidisha, Chaza Charafeddine, Molly Crabapple, Carol Ann Duffy, Moris Farhi, Negin Farsad, Joumana Haddad, Saleem Haddad, Hassan Hajjaj, Omar Hamdi, Jennifer Jajeh, Sayed Kashua, Mazen Kerbaj, Arwa Mahdawi, Sabrina Mahfouz, Alberto Manguel, Esther Manito, Aisha Mirza, James Nunn, Chris Riddell, Hazem Saghieh, Rana Salam, Karl Sharro, Laila Shawa, Bahia Shehab, Sjon, Eli Valley, Alex Wheatle.
Tabella dei contenuti
p2 Arwa Mahdawi, ‘A Personal Guide to Extreme Vetting’; p8 Chant Avedissian, ‘Are You Talkin’ To Me?’; p12 Karl Sharro, ‘The Joys of Applying for a US Visa’; p20 James Nunn, ‘Colour Abdullah!’; p22 Negin Farsad, ‘My Own People Don’t Like Me Very Much’; p30 Bidisha, ’50 States of America First’; p32 Chris Riddell, ‘La La Land’; p34 Hazem Saghieh, ‘Trump and Gaddafi’; p36 Molly Crabapple, ‘Trumpination’; p38 Omar Hamdi, ‘Islam Is Not Spiritual, But Is A Useful Identity’; p40 Esther Manito, ‘A Sidon-Gateshead Upbringing (in Essex)’; p44 Hassan Hajjaj, ‘Kesh Angels’; p48 Saleem Haddad, ‘Do I Understand That You Are A Homosexual, Sir?’; p56 Rana Salam, ‘Sexy Souk’; p58 Amrou Al-Kadhi, ‘How Islam Taught Me To Be A Drag Queen’; p62 Chaza Charafeddine, ‘Divine Comedy’; p66 Leila Aboulela, ‘Majed’; p76 Jennifer Jajeh, ‘White Like Me’; p84 Hassan Abdulrazzak, ‘Tuesday’s Child’; p92 Eli Valley, ‘Are Nazi Analogies Kosher Today?’; p96 Moris Farhi, ‘Of Dolphin Children and Leviathans’; p108 Tammam Azzam, ‘From Syria With Love;’ p118 Alex Wheatle, ‘Shade-ism’; p124 Carol Ann Duffy, ‘Comprehensive’; p126 Aisha Mirza, ‘Yesterday I Stepped on a White Woman’s Yoga Mat’; p132 Laila Shawa, ‘Disposable Bodies’; p134 Joumana Haddad, ‘The Joke’s On Them’; p136 Mazen Kerbaj, ‘Cola’; p138 Sabrina Mahfouz, ‘Postcard From a Muslim Mermaid’; p146 ‘Preparing My Kids for the New America’; p150 Alberto Manguel, ‘Fabulous Creatures’; p158 Bahia Shebab, ‘There Are People’; p164 Sjon, ‘The Muslim: A Cautionary Tale’; p167 Afterword; p169 About the Contributors; p180 Permissions
Circa l’autore
Lynn Gaspard is the publisher of Middle-East specialist press Saqi Books. Shortlisted for the Independent Publishers Guild Young Publisher of the Year Award in 2013, Gaspard is a trustee of the Shubbak Festival and sits on the English PEN Writers in Translation Committee.