Chopping Onions on My Heart

Regular price €21.99
A01=Samantha Ellis
afua hirsch
ancestors
arabic
Author_Samantha Ellis
baghdad
british museum
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Category=JBCC6
Category=JBCC7
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Category=JBS
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Category=NHTB
Category=QRJ
cooking
cultural history
culture
dance
dancing
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
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family
family history
family recipe
food
generations
healing
hebrew
history
history of the middle east
iraq
iraqi
iraqi arabic
israel
jew
jewish
jewish books
johnny pitts
judaism
kohl
language
lea ypi
london
make up
memoir
michelle zauner
middle east
mother
mother and son
mother son
music
nikesh shukla
noahs ark
oxford
palestine
parenting
pickles
race
recipe
recipes
refugee
refugees
religion
religious books
sathnam sanghera
social history
the politics of food
therapy
tigris
trauma

Product details

  • ISBN 9781784745028
  • Weight: 390g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 222mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Vintage Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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'An optimistic and wryly funny book... rich with insights' OBSERVER
'I couldn’t put it down’ RUKMINI IYER
‘I loved this book so much... Think: The Body Keeps the Score in practice not theory’ ELLA RISBRIDGER

Samantha’s mother tongue is dying out. An urgent need to find out more becomes an expansive investigation into how to keep hold of her culture – and when to let it go

The daughter of Iraqi Jewish refugees, Samantha grew up surrounded by the noisy, vivid, hot sounds of Judeo-Iraqi Arabic. A language that’s now on the verge of extinction.

The realisation that she won’t be able to tell her son he’s ‘living in the days of the aubergines’ or ‘chopping onions on my heart’ opens the floodgates. The questions keep coming. How can she pass on the stories without passing on the trauma of displacement? Will her son ever love mango pickle?

In her search for answers Samantha encounters demon bowls, the perils of kohl and the unexpected joys of fusion food. Her journey transports us from the clamour of Noah’s Ark to the calm of the British Museum, from the Oxford School of Rare Jewish Languages to the banks of the River Tigris. As Samantha considers what we lose and keep, she also asks what we might need to let go of to preserve our culture and ourselves.

This is a life-affirming memoir about resilience and repair, and the healing power of dancing to our ancestors’ music, cooking up their recipes and sharing their stories.

‘A moving and resonant lament for the past but also a thought-provoking siren call for the future' ANNE SEBBA
'Urgent, alive, propulsive. I adored it' MARINA BENJAMIN

The daughter of Iraqi-Jewish refugees, Samantha Ellis is the author of the books How to be a Heroine and Take Courage and her plays include How to Date a Feminist, Cling to me Like Ivy and Operation Magic Carpet. Her journalism has appeared in the Guardian, TLS, Spectator, Literary Review and more. She worked on the first two Paddington films. She lives in London.