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Towelhead : A Novel

posted Thursday, 4 August 2005
Towelhead : A Novel

Alicia Erian

Date: 29 March, 2005   —   $15.40   —   Book

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Ok, I don't know why books about predatory relationships keep falling into my lap. Could someone please send something lighthearted and funny my way??

Towelhead is about the early sexualization of an Arab-Irish girl so starved for affection and physical contact she constantly allows men to overstep their boundaries in a variety of inappropriate ways. When Jasira's mother discovers her own boyfriend is helping her daughter get a neat bikini line, she kicks the guy out and sends Jasira to live with her strict Arab father, thinking that living with a man will help learn how to act appropriately around them. An upstanding member of the armed services who lives next door takes an interest in the 34-C cup teen, who begins to baby-sit for his obnoxious son. We know what's coming, it's just a matter of how long.

The story takes place during the 1990's but it seems to take place in a cultural void, with little detail about time and place to round out the narrative. The Gulf War is the only orienting detail. The voice, at a blend of innocent and worldly, is near pitch perfect, but the plot is so overly focused on sexual awakening that there isn't space to examine the prejudices and racial issues more closely.

There are two redeeming qualities to this book. Jasira embraces her sexual feelings and explores how to give herself pleasure, and recognizes that she deserves to feel good about herself and her body. And, the thirteen-year-old black boy who becomes her boyfriend is more of a gentleman than the pervert next door, and it is refreshing to think that an adolescent boy might have learned something in a porn magazine beyond idolizing airbrushed dolts - he geniunely seems to care about what Jasira wants and is as focused on her pleasure in their relationship as his own.

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1. Nadeem (a bloke) left...
Wednesday, 12 July 2006 10:16 am

Just read the book, quite well-written, but deeply disturbing. Due to her parents' neglect, and in Rifat, her father's case, downright abuse, Jasira ironically conspires in her own abuse, mistaking abuse for affection.

The main reason I'm posting is that I'm concerned by the above post's remark that James, Jasira's teenage boyfriend, is somehow more likeable than Mr Vuoso. It may be politically incorrect, but James too exploits Jasira in his own way, using her as a sex object for his own teenage fantasies. If he clearly cared for Jasira, surely he would be more a confidante in the novel. Instead, as the novel progresses, he manipulates Jasira in his own manner. Several people have criticized the book for not exploring racial issues more closely; however, I think the book is a subtle critique on sexual mores, finding fault in both the Arabic and Western. Jasira's father represents a rigid Middle Eastern view of women (abuse a commonplace), but Mr Vuoso with his airbrushed Playboys and James the teenager represent infantile manhood pervading Western society where women are viewed as sex objects.

It's left to Melina and Gil to provide hope as a portrayal of a mature, loving relationship.