From this Street to the Moon – Nabila Jameel

New poetry book set in the north of England and Pakistan

Exploring the dynamics of growing up in a working class family in a northern town, Nabila Jameel's new poetry collection takes us on a journey through life in England, coloured with visits to Pakistan.

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About the Book

Exploring the dynamics of growing up in a working class family in a northern town, Nabila Jameel takes us on a journey through life in England, coloured with visits to Pakistan. From this Street to the Moon is a feast for the senses, filled with sumptuous details and mesmerising descriptions of everyday activities, evoking both raw and tender moments, from hastily devouring mangoes in the summer heat of Pakistan –

Chilled mangoes were meals in the sticky heat
of monsoon summers: we giggled as the juice trickled
through our fingers down to our feet.

to a day out in Blackpool –

Our parents took us every summer.
Five of us packed in the back
of the Cortina, without seatbelts.
Dad: wearing a well pressed shirt,
mum: bride-like, adorned with gold.

In her verses the reader can almost smell the roti as it is freshly made over an open fire, or feel they are standing on the roadside as ‘A Vespa stutters past/ and then a rikshaw, heavy with loud women.’ From a child’s eyes we are able to feel the joy and freedom of bathing in the back yard – ‘We sat towel wrapped in the sun and shivered/ while droplets fell onto our flip flops./ Smiles were bigger than our house’, and sense the fatigue of her hard-working parents when her father ‘comes home tired/ hands the crispy wage packet to mum/ eats in haste and falls asleep as if he’s drugged.’

In her unflinching social commentary Jameel explores the harsh realities of society: poverty, abuse and misogyny. Racism and identity are explored through the discomfort of being a foreigner in an ancestral homeland while facing both overt and subtle racial abuse in the UK.

There’s a pile of BNP leaflets in my porch –
they’ve been dropping through my letterbox all week. 

Whether describing the process of starching a shalwar kameez, buying tins of baked beans in a bazaar in Hayatabad, or highlighting uncomfortable social and cultural undercurrents, Jameel’s words are vivid and evocative, taking us on a journey with her as we travel through prominent milestones in life, experiencing the highs and lows, while navigating between two cultures. Grief and loss are intertwined with and explored through culture and spirituality –

You’re in the sun lowering itself to sleep.
You’re in your teacup I’m drinking from.
You’re even in the kitchen:
hospital appointments marked
on the calendar, now obsolete.

Details
Author:
Series: South Asian Heritage Month
Genres: Inspirational, Poetry
Publisher: Lote Tree Press
Publication Year: 2021
Format: Paperback
Length: 126 pages
ASIN: 191624887X
ISBN: 9781916248878
Rating:

About the Author
Nabila Jameel

Nabila is an English teacher, with an MA in Creative Writing from Manchester (tutored by Carol Ann Duffy and Simon Armitage). She is currently writing her second collection on issues affecting women and also working on art projects, mainly pen and ink sketches. Her poetry has been published in journals and anthologies as well as articles. You can follow her on Instagram and read her blogs on her website: @njpoetessa / www.nabilajameel.com

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