A Good Country by Laleh Khadivi. Courtesy Bloomsbury
A Good Country by Laleh Khadivi. Courtesy Bloomsbury

Book review: Laleh Khadivi’s A Good Country explores how intolerence can send a teen into radicalism



In the aftermath of ISIL-inspired attacks, there are stories we hear far too often. Of young people growing up in the West becoming increasingly alienated, only finding a sense of their identity in radicalisation.

Now that premise is the alarming backdrop to Iranian-American author Laleh Khadivi’s latest novel, the story of a typical American teenager eventually seduced by the dream of a Muslim caliphate.

Initially, at least, the story of Rez Courdee is classic coming of age stuff. He kicks against his conservative immigrant parents. Looking for acceptance, he goes slightly off the rails as school comes to an end. But he's a good guy at heart. Which is why what happens next is so sad. There isn't a specific moment which turns Courdee towards fundamentalism – in fact, he's largely dismissive of his increasingly pious friends. But Khadivi's main argument is essentially that terrorist action in the West – in A Good Country's case, the Boston bombings of 2013 – breeds something more lasting than headlines: it creates intolerance and prejudice.

In the end, Courdee can’t handle the constant suspicion and lies. He finds a kind of kinship in people who feel the same way as him, some of whom twist that sentiment towards darker territory.

This is the third in Khadivi's loose trilogy following one immigrant family, and she clearly knows what she's writing about. But while the journey to jihad might start as innocuously as Courdee's, in the wake of the Manchester attacks, it does make for uneasy reading; it would be all too straightforward for the unsympathetic to read A Good Country as a warning that radicalisation is lurking beneath the surface in all Muslims. Yet there is a sympathy for Courdee – like any other teenager, he's battling for meaning. It's just that the life choices he's forced to make can't give him the good ending he deserves.

Perhaps it would have been easier for Khadivi to write that ending. The fact she doesn't is brave, but in these heightened times, it also feels irresponsible: A Good Country is a powerful and readable book, but it assumes its readers will empathise. Sadly, they may not.

A Good Country (Bloomsbury) is out now Dh39, from Amazon.com

Pearls on a Branch: Oral Tales
​​​​​​​Najlaa Khoury, Archipelago Books

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Zakat: an Arabic word meaning ‘to cleanse’ or ‘purification’.

Nisab: the minimum amount that a Muslim must have before being obliged to pay zakat. Traditionally, the nisab threshold was 87.48 grams of gold, or 612.36 grams of silver. The monetary value of the nisab therefore varies by current prices and currencies.

Zakat Al Mal: the ‘cleansing’ of wealth, as one of the five pillars of Islam; a spiritual duty for all Muslims meeting the ‘nisab’ wealth criteria in a lunar year, to pay 2.5 per cent of their wealth in alms to the deserving and needy.

Zakat Al Fitr: a donation to charity given during Ramadan, before Eid Al Fitr, in the form of food. Every adult Muslim who possesses food in excess of the needs of themselves and their family must pay two qadahs (an old measure just over 2 kilograms) of flour, wheat, barley or rice from each person in a household, as a minimum.

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