cover image Playing Atari with Saddam Hussein: Based on a True Story

Playing Atari with Saddam Hussein: Based on a True Story

Jennifer Roy with Ali Fadhil. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $16.99 (176p) ISBN 978-0-544-78507-6

Fadhil’s childhood in Iraq forms the basis of this dramatic fictionalized account of life during Operation Desert Storm, the 43-day war that followed Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1991, which conveys both the horrors and banality of war. Eleven-year-old Ali loves reading Superman comics, playing soccer, and watching American television, from which he has learned English. He hates Saddam Hussein and anguishes that “soon, America—the land that I love—is going to try to kill me.” Ali’s narrative voice captures the tension of a boy who is young enough to cry when his mother burns a comic book to cook their rice and old enough to comprehend the absurdity of Americans dubbing the nightly bombing “the video game war.” Ali’s experiences include being forced to watch a public execution, fearing his father has been killed, and being irritated that he can’t play outside. Roy (Jars of Hope) and Fadhil, an interpreter during Hussein’s trial, offer a window into what Ali calls “the true Iraq” and a disturbing but accessible portrait of a civilian child’s perspective on war. Ages 10–12. [em]Agent: Alyssa Eisner Henkin, Trident Media Group. (Feb.) [/em]