Review:
The Glory Garage: Growing up Lebanese Muslim in Australia by Nadia Jamal and Taghred Chandab Read by Melissa
Eccleston Hawthorn, Vic : Louis Braille Audio, 2006
41/4 hours, 4 CDs
ISBN 0 7320 3135 4
The Glory Garage: Growing up Lebanese Muslim in Australia by two
journalists, is an interesting collection of short stories about the
experiences of young girls growing up Lebanese Muslim in Australia. It
aims to tell the stories of real people growing up in migrant families
who have kept rigidly to their religious beliefs, and to give an
insight into the Islam religion.
The reader Melissa Eccleston, gives an Australian voice to the young
Muslim women, in an expressive narration of different aspects of their
lives. Her voice is easy to listen to and captures the lives and hopes
of young women who are often caught between two cultures. Conflict is
convincingly communicated. The listener becomes engaged with the racism
that the girls encounter, the problems faced at school and with
boyfriends, and the difficult choices that they are forced to make.
The different stories are well paced in this quality reading and the
listener is left with an indepth understanding of the Islam religion
and the lives of the young women. It would be a useful additon to
school libraries, as individuals could use it for personal
enlightenment, and it would fit into both the English and Society and
Environment curricula.
Pat Pledger
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© Pledger
Consulting, 2007