A Down Home Meal for These Difficult Times
By (Author) Meron Hadero
Canongate Books
Canongate Books
28th February 2023
1st December 2022
Main
United Kingdom
Paperback
224
Width 135mm, Height 214mm, Spine 16mm
223g
An enterprising young man on the verge of losing his home in Addis Ababa pursues an improbable opportunity to turn his life around. A woman visiting her country of origin for the first time finds that an ordinary object opens up an unexpected, complex bridge between worlds. An intergenerational friendship forms between two refugees living in Iowa who have connections to Germany before the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Kaleidoscopic, powerful and illuminative, the stories in A Down Home Meal for These Difficult Times expand our understanding of the essential and universal need for connection and the vital refuge of home.
These stories capture lives caught between cultures and continents, past and present, truth and lies. As its displaced characters seek belonging, this collection explores the challenges of connection with empathy and nuance. A thrilling debut -- BRIT BENNETT
Wonderful, wise stories [capturing] the experience of dislocation and loneliness * * Daily Mail * *
Shines with potent, affecting moments * * Independent * *
A Down Home Meal for These Difficult Times held me spellbound, riveted to the compelling characters that walk through these pages, all of them guided by Meron's revelatory and generous examinations of belonging and displacement -- MAAZA MENGISTE
Brims with lives on the margins, collisions that do not fully happen, redemptions thwarted at the last minute . . . This style, which time and time again comes off the page as truly effortless, is what makes Hadero a new master of the form, and this collection a masterful one -- CHIGOZIE OBIOMA
Debut books don't get much stronger than this. Meron Hadero's remarkable stories explore a diverse cast of people doing their best to find acceptance or at least stability . . . Hadero is deeply perceptive; her dialogue always rings true, and the regard she has for her characters is apparent. This isn't just an excellent first book, it's an excellent book, period * * Books We Love, NPR * *
Heartwarming, thought-provoking . . . Hadero tactfully shines a light on the hardships that many migrants face, those of citizenship, displacement, financial instability. But what stuck with me was the running thread of hope throughout * * gal-dem * *
Memorable and engaging * * Times Literary Supplement * *
Meron Hadero's dazzling short stories span the diaspora, poignantly portraying characters in search of opportunity and belonging. Rich with insight, compassion and wit . . . an unforgettable debut -- VANESSA HUA
Intricate and precise . . . To say that Hadero's style is discreet would be inaccurate; these stories lull, then rip you open. A powerful, unforgettable collection -- INGRID ROJAS CONTRERAS
Meron Hadero is an Ethiopian-American who was born in Addis Ababa and came to the US via Germany as a young child. Meron's short stories have won the AKO Caine Prize for African Writing, and appear in Best American Short Stories, McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, 40 Short Stories: A Portable Anthology and others. She was a contributor to The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Live and has been published in the New York Times. A 2019- 2020 Steinbeck Fellow at San Jose State University, Meron holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Michigan, a JD from Yale Law School (Washington State Bar) and a BA in history from Princeton with a certificate in American studies.
@meronhadero | meronhadero.com