Between Two Deserts is the first of four novels Germaine Shames
 has written since 2002.  A former foreign correspondent, Germaine took a
 scissors to her press pass when she realized reporting about 
international news in an imposed limited format made it impossible to 
describe for readers the complicated interaction of people caught up in 
daily existence, politics, and war. Nowhere is this more evident than in
 Jerusalem during the Palestinian Intifada (1987 to 1993) where 
describing events as news misses the mark in showing the world the 
importance of religion, land, tradition, money, family, and information 
to Jews and Arabs, Israelis and Palestinians. Ms. Shames’ first novel 
shows the reader that at individual and social levels, there are many 
strongly-held points of view that involve more questions than answers. 
As a writer of fiction, Ms. Shames also understands what E. M. Forster 
indicated in India during the British Raj, that writing novels about 
foreign locations is always given the most color when love relationships
 develop in unfamiliar and stressful circumstances.
The cast of 
characters in Between Two Deserts cluster around the lodestone, Eve 
Cavell, a young American Jew who travels to Jerusalem after the death of
 her grandfather. Two generations away from the holocaust, Eve is not a 
wide-eyed ingénue but rather a person with superficial attachments to 
Jewish tradition and feelings of the sanctity of the homeland. Showing 
an apparent weak identity with her heritage, Eve seems free of strong 
political views and social prejudice.  She is vital in her open 
sexuality and general freedom of spirit, qualities that are suppressed 
in Jerusalem residents. Characters illustrating constricted views and 
behaviors on the unsettled stage of Jerusalem during the period of 
Palestinian uprising include: Mozes Koenig a professor of Middle East 
Studies from Budapest survivor of the Holocaust and author of a  novel 
popular ten years ago in Jerusalem A Time for War, Salim Mahmoud a 
restless  young Arab man whose family’s wealth was greatly decreased 
when the Israelis annexed East Jerusalem,  engineer Jacob Halevi an 
orphan placed by the Jewish Agency on Kibbutz Sde Boker after surviving 
World War II, Jacob’s wife Leah a degreed psychologist in private 
practice, Sana Mahmoud director of an orphanage for Arab children whose 
goal was to raise the next generation of Palestinian nationalists.
The
 story involves Mozes’ controversial new novel, A Time for Peace, 
inspired by his wife Gizella who was shot dead in route to Dachau for 
singing a lullaby to a frightened child. Eve reminds him of his wife, 
his muse, giving him new insight into the Israeli/Palestinian problem 
making him think that peace is possible. Salim, Jacob, and Sana do not 
see eye to eye with Mozes or each other. 
This is an excellent 
novel that I enjoyed reading as much as I did Ms. Shames’ other three 
novels: Hotel Noir and Echo Year (written as Casper Silk) and You, 
Fascinating You. I so admire her writing style. It captures the essence 
of the settings and the characters with poetic impact. In Between Two 
Deserts, Germaine reminds me of Lawrence Durrell and his novel, Justine.
  Jerusalem and Eve are the focus for Shames, and Alexandria and Justine
 are the focus for Durrell. As with Durrell, Germaine Shames writes with
 a great sense of time and timing. I highly recommend all four of 
Germaine Shames' novels.  
 
My thanks to Gary Severance for this review of my debut novel, BETWEEN TWO DESERTS, re-released today in a second print edition. Gary, a generous reader and insightful reviewer, has, more than once, helped me better understand my own work. I'm so grateful.
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