This was so well-written I think my brain died. The way that the poems are written provoked pretty strong emotional reactions in me, and you bet your ass I was crying on the bus while reading “Mediterranean Blue”. I genuinely loved reading the poems in this book out loud to really hear and absorb how beautiful the writing of the poetry was, like damn.
This was such a brilliantly written window into the daily lives of Janna Jihad and those around her, while at the same time being written by a different person. How the book talked about the exhaustion, the fear, and the frustration of the people leading their daily lives constantly surrounded by the conflict that no one seems to care about was to me very unforgettable.
The book speaks on how Janna Jihad, other children, adult Palestinians and Palestinian Americans see and respond to the hardships faces by those who live along the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Many of the poems are written from the perspective of a child or a young person learning and becoming familiar with the horrors of war, and similarly to when Janna talks about the conflicts she faces and sees every day, this book was jarring in its bluntness and emotional intensity, which I loved and appreciated.
A major theme of the book is grief, as you would expect. There is a lot of loss, and dealing with loss, and the fear of losing those you love, present in the poems which is and it was interesting how relatable emotions like grief and loss, were put into the unfamiliar context of war and constant violence to speak to the reader and make them really absorb the things the books was to saying.
TL;DR – read the goddamn book. It’s amazing.