Miriam Moss gave a wonderful talk about her new book at the
CWIG conference in Bath, with the result that her book sold out within minutes
of the talk ending. I bought the book
later, and I’m very glad that I did.
This is an extraordinary tale, written by an established
writer of children’s fiction who just happened to have lived through the real
life terrifying ordeal of a four day hijacking.
In 1970, teenaged Miriam was travelling from her family’s
temporary home in The Middle East back to boarding school in England. Two aeroplanes had been hijacked by Palestinian guerillas in the previous couple of days, and were now parked in desert in Jordan
as the hijackers made their demands and threatened to blow the planes up with
all on board. Suddenly, in mid-flight, there was a man with a
gun, and another with suitcase of explosives, on Miriam’s own flight. Following the hijackers' demands, that Boeing 747 with over a hundred people on board joined those others, parked in the desert with the
clock ticking towards the terrorists’ deadline for death.
Miriam did survive, and she went back to ‘normal’
life. Her school felt that the best way
to help her overcome that traumatic experience was to act as if it had never
happened. For over forty years the
experience lay dormant. Then she
mentioned it to her publisher, who told her she must try writing about the
experience. She wasn’t sure she could,
but began researching and remembering and finding things from that time, and
found that she could write about it, but in fictionalised form because of
course she couldn’t remember every conversation that had happened, and because
to write about other people on the plane who are still alive wouldn’t be fair
on them.
So this story is fiction, but heavily based in reality. It is the story of fifteen year old Anna, the
four days of her hijacking ordeal, and a day or two either side of that. It is written in the first person in short
chapters headed with a time and place.
Most of the text gives Anna’s point of view as she and her co-hostages endure
the extreme heat and cold of the desert, lack of food and drink, and, of course,
the threat of death by being blown-up or shot one by one is Prime Minister
Heath doesn’t agree to release their comrade back in the UK. The mix of extreme boredom and extreme terror
is well handled, along with the relationships she develops with other passengers,
crew, and even the hijackers. But we
also get glimpses of Anna’s parents’ and brothers’ experiences through all
this, particularly Marni’s (as she calls her mother). Maybe it’s because I am a mother of daughters
that I found those parts the hardest to read, and their eventual reunion
weepily moving!
This is a compelling and relatively short read, simply told
but with a voice that (apart from odd use of very modern dialogue) utterly
convinces as it tells the story in a way which I’m sure is different from the
way a writer making it up would work things.
We’d expect Anna to surely hate the plane that has been her explosive-primed
prison, and yet, when freedom comes, she is scared to leave it and reacts with
grief when she sees the plane blown-up on the television news. Who would dare make up the scene in which the
hostages are lined-up on the desert for a flock of journalist and photographers
to photograph and interview? And yet it
happened, and you can look online to see the resulting photographs.
We are given some insight into the plight of the
Palestinians driven to the desperate acts of kidnap and murder, and that’s interesting. But the real story here is Anna’s
experience. That stays with you long
after finishing reading.
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2 comments:
I'd heard and wondered about this book, so it's a pleasure to read such a positive review. Must look out for it!
I quite agree, Pippa, it's a wonderful book. I too bought it straight after the CWIG conference, and was so glad I had.
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