A Suspended Life

A Suspended Life is a novel written by a Palestinian novelist Atef Abu Saif.

[2][3][4][5] In his novel "A Suspended Life", the Palestinian novelist Atef Abu Saif tells about Naim's death, owner of the only printing press in the camp, who was shot by the Israeli occupation army.

But Naim's death alters many details of the peaceful life on the camp's outskirts, where the hill on which Naim built a house, the government wants to exploit the hill and build a mosque and police station.

Because the hill held a special place in people's collective awareness, the residents of the camp were opposed to the project and resisted it until a clash with the police occurred.

The novel reveals many details of life in Gaza, and Jaffa "the home of camp refugees" is called through time retrievals, narrative discrepancies, and overlapping anecdotes that detail an amazing world in which people interact, argue, and struggle to redefine and install the concept of identity, heroism, and life.