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A DOWN HOME MEAL FOR THESE DIFFICULT TIMES by Meron Hadero Kirkus Star

A DOWN HOME MEAL FOR THESE DIFFICULT TIMES

by Meron Hadero

Pub Date: June 7th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-63206-118-8
Publisher: Restless Books

In her debut story collection, Addis Ababa–born Hadero addresses Ethiopian Americans' struggles for acceptance, the painful ties between present and past, and the elusive meaning of home.

Raised in the United States and now based in San Francisco, Hadero sets a tone of dizzying displacement from the start in "The Suitcase," in which 20-year-old American Saba visits her birth city of Addis Ababa for the first time. Far from a romantic family reunion, the trip is full of cultural land mines including the one she nearly steps on when relatives and family friends bicker over which of their gifts Saba will bring back to the U.S. In “Mekonnen aka Mack aka Huey Freakin’ Newton,” set in 1989 in a Brooklyn wracked by racial conflict, sixth grader Mekonnen learns the meaning of pride—and shame—as a member of a group of activist Black kids. And in "Sinkholes," an Ethiopian-born high schooler, the only Black student in his class in rural Florida, is put to an impossible test when his teacher asks students to write racial epithets on the blackboard, thinking this "exercise" is empowering. A full range of stylistic approaches is on display in these stories, from the satirical spin on the odd disappearance of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi in 2012 to the magical realism of mysterious "floating houses." Hadero's writing derives great power from her nuanced references to Ethiopia's anguished history, including the atrocities of the Derg military junta. As one character says, survival is about "letting that past move through you and move with you and move you so that it's you deciding for yourself what you're worth."

Entertaining and affecting stories with a deft lightness of touch.