Native Believer
Written by Ali Eteraz
Narrated by Elias Khalil
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
Editor's Note
Darkly funny…
When a Muslim American gets fired because of his religion — despite the fact that he’s not religious at all — all hell breaks loose in his life. Ali Eteraz’s debut novel is a darkly funny, thought-provoking look at identity in the post-9/11 world and the Kafkaesque absurdities of what it means “to belong” in America. With what Library Journal calls a “bang-up surprise” ending, this one’s not to be missed.
Ali Eteraz
Ali Eteraz was born in Pakistan and has lived in the Middle East, the Caribbean, and the United States. A graduate of Emory University and Temple Law School, he was selected for the Outstanding Scholar's Program at the United States Department of Justice and later worked in corporate litigation in Manhattan. He has published articles in Dissent, Foreign Policy, AlterNet, and altMuslim; and is a regular contributor to The Guardian UK.
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Reviews for Native Believer
40 ratings7 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5HORRIBLE narration. Good story - thought provoking and relevant to todays issues
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A difficult listen. The monotone delivery is already an impediment, but the cowardice, inertia and insincerity of the main protagonist is the real problem. Nevertheless it is a thorough journey into the difficulty, the hard choices, facing American Muslims after 9/11.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Native Believer is the story of M., a second-generation Muslim American who knows almost nothing about the faith. M., who was raised in the South, is married to Marie-Ann, a white Southerner, and the two have made a rather comfortable life for themselves. It is only when M. throws a party for his co-workers and invites their new boss that things start to go bad for him – in a hurry.The rather odd Germanic man seems to be enjoying M.’s company but when he spots a tiny Koran on the top bookshelf in M.’s apartment, the new boss makes an offhand comment about finding the Koran placed “above” all the other books on the shelves, especially those of some of the world’s most respected philosophers. The very next day, M. is called into the man’s office and fired.M. wants nothing more from life than to be an American, a man with roots and children he intends to raise as modern Americans, not as Muslims. But after the murders of 9-11, it is not that simple. M. carries a Muslim name, and in today’s America, he is ethnically challenged enough to be seen as a suspicious person almost everywhere he goes. Now his life is falling apart.His wife resents that he cannot find work, and the tension between the two aggravates the medical condition that causes her to gain huge amounts of weight in a matter of weeks. Their marriage is beginning to fall apart, and there is little that either of them seems to care to do about it. M. is at a crossroads. As he wanders Philadelphia’s streets on foot, he runs into a group of devout Muslims who mistrust his lack of piety and want to convert him; he befriends a Muslim pornographer who says he is trying to get Americans to see Muslim men as anything other than terrorists; and Marie-Ann’s job brings him into contact with other Muslims who want him to help spread the good word about life in America to suspicious Muslims all around the world. In the meantime, M. feels like his world is being ripped apart.Native Believer makes for a bit tedious reading at times, but it is filled with characters I wanted to know more about. M.’s struggle for a self-identity seems very real in today’s world, and I very much wanted to see how Eteraz would resolve his main character’s dilemma. Let’s just say that the book’s final two pages are nothing like I expected it would all end – so do not, under any circumstance, read the end of Native Believer first. Please.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5It's hard for me to know what to say about this book. Although the writing is entertaining, as are the characters, the truth is that I just didn't enjoy it.. at all. On its face, I was excited to read it--the book presents the story of a man who, though raised as a Muslim, simply doesn't practice any belief system. When his boss fires him in an apparent reaction to his assumed religion, though, his wife and everyone around him seem to be pushing him to re-build his identity in direct relation to his being a Muslim, though he didn't even consider himself one to begin with. There's a lot of nuance to the psychology of what's presented here actually, and it's a story that ought to be told and discussed... and yet. Stylistically, and in terms of tone, there's not really anything about this book that I enjoyed, beyond the broadest possible look at the subject.In some ways, I'd compare it to American Psycho, but with a cynical look at belief and love integrated where the other takes a look at consumerism and sex and violence. Another relevant comparison might be the works of Flannery O'Connor, because of this author's juxtaposition of cynical belief, or lack thereof, with characters who are as much grotesques as full-bodied presentations, entertaining as they are. And yet... neither comparison really gets at the work, though each pulls at a piece of what bothers me about it.Simply, I suppose I just felt that everything was a little bit overdone, a little bit extreme. And maybe that's the point--I wouldn't be surprised if it is. But nevertheless, I'm afraid it made the book a struggle for me to get through.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is very timely, and I feel like everyone ought to read it for that reason if nothing else. Some pacing issues but overall very solid.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Eteraz’s very timely novel is thought-provoking, inventive, amusing in tone and a little crass as it explores the complex issues of identity against the destiny we desire. The narrator known as M. is a second-generation secular Muslim raised in the South who was well on his way of solidifying his Americanization until he loses his job because his boss finds out M. has a Koran in his home. All the paranoia of the post 9/11 America and The War of Terror are now placed on his shoulders as he has been labeled a Muslim”, an identity he never assigned to himself. In his despondent state, M. wrestles with the political, social and personal tensions as he works through who he is. I liked that the book is set in Philadelphia which has a set known identity associated with liberty and freedom and how it is upended as the author writes of an underground Philadelphia. The scenes of violence and disrespectful behavior towards women made me uncomfortable. Overall, I thought the writing was fresh as it explores issues of identity, religion, and stereotypes. I look forward of reading future books by the author.This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I leave the synopsis to other reviewers, because I found the value of this book to be in helping me understand the position, thoughts, and experiences of Muslim-Americans in our country today. I found myself underlining moments that seemed to articulate the Muslim experience (both religious and non) in America, and that helped inform me about their experiences and understand where they feel they fit (or don't) in American society. I do wonder how much of the novel is typical for middle-class Muslims, and if any is biographical for the author. I didn't find the author's style particularly remarkable, and thought the character of Marie-Anne rather cartoonish (although this is somewhat explained in the book's final pages--whether satisfyingly or believably is up to the reader), but I did enjoy the humor and sometimes wry comments about American society.