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Book Review
Helped by strangers, he finds his way to a vaguely remembered cousin, also an illegal immigrant, but not the innocent soul that Aziz is. Through a complicated process he comes to a hospital and care for his injuries. From that somewhat promising beginning, he finds himself confused and desperate as he lives with an assortment of strange people in the apartment with the cousin Rafik. Not only does he suspect that Rafikis a criminal, but he is also deeply disturbed by his memories of his time in the Algerian army, from which he escaped after horrible experiences. Then his brother Mourad wins a green card and joins them in America. Life and the plot become more intricate and suspenseful. These very illegal immigrants are sympathetic characters, and the reader finds herself on their side when the FBI begins to close in, believing that this is a terrorist cell. Lorraine Adams is a prize-winning journalist. This, her first novel, reflectsher acquaintance with contemporary events and knowledge of the "ways of the world."
Harbor is moving and gripping. A gift of the Friends of the Library, it is available at the Mary Willis Library.
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