by TamaraChalabi (Author)
A lyrical, haunting, multi-generational memoir of one family's tempestuous century in Iraq from 1900 to the present.
The Chalabis are one of the oldest and most prominent families in Iraq. For centuries they have occupied positions of honour and responsibility, loyally serving first the Ottoman Empire and, later, the national government.
In `Late for Tea at the Deer Palace', Tamara Chalabi explores the dramatic story of her extraordinary family's history in this beautiful, passionate and troubled land. From the grand opulence of her great-grandfather's house and the birth of the modern state, through to the elegant Iraq of her grandmother Bibi, who lived the life of a queen in Baghdad, and finally to her own story, that of the ex-pat daughter of a family in exile, Chalabi takes us on an unforgettable and eye-opening journey.
This is the story of a lost homeland, whose turbulent transformations over the twentieth century left gaping wounds at the hearts not only of the family it exiled, but also of the elegant, sophisticated world it once represented. When Tamara visited her once-beautiful ancestral land for the first time in 2003, she found a country she didn't recognize - and a nation on the brink of a terrifying and uncertain new beginning.
Lyrical and unique, this exquisite multi-generational memoir brings together east and west, the poetic and the political as it brings to life a land of beauty and grace that has been all but lost behind recent headlines.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 448
Publisher: HarperPress
Published: 05 Aug 2010
ISBN 10: 0007249314
ISBN 13: 9780007249312
`In this absorbing book [Chalabi] has wrapped up much that is important in Iraq's history in the story of her own family's development through the 20th century...She does so beautifully, in a complex family memoir attuned to the beats of Iraqi history...Chalabi's aim is to reclaim for her readers a country that war and news have reduced to a desert of tanks, screaming women and barefoot children . She succeeds: a meditation on exile, a moving family portrait, thoughtful and well-researched, Late for Tea gives Iraq, as much as the Chalabi family, its story.' Jason Goodwin, Spectator
`Delicate and intricately wrought...there is a sense of poignancy and acute longing for an Iraq that is all but unrecognisable today' Traveller
`Tamara's tale is not about WMDs or insurgents. It is the story of a bourgeois Iraqi family set against the opulent backdrop of the Ottoman Empire...It is the story of Iraq, but told from an Iraqi woman's perspective; then it also becomes the story of a young woman's struggle for identity... Late for Tea at the Deer Palace has a whimsical, magical quality' Janine di Giovani, Telegraph
`Chalabi describes a litany of privilege through the 1930s and 1940s: picnics on islands in the Tigris, tea parties with royal princesses, card games, matchmaking and gossip...From the sweet buffalo cream her great-grandfather adores to the dancing girls in the risque new cafes her grandfather frequents, the richness of an expired epoch long past is lovingly rendered' Wendell Steavenson, Sunday Times
Tamara Chalabi has a PhD from Harvard University in History. Her first book, 'The Shi'is of Jabal'Amil and the New Lebanon: 1918-1943' was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2006. She has written for the 'Sunday Times', 'New Republic', 'Wall Street Journal', 'Slate' and 'Prospect', on war, culture, encounters, and identities. She lives in London.