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Books in Dick's Collection Response

In Search of Story: A Response to Where Grape Leaves Grow by Anna Daliza

Written by Ess Astifo.

I’m in the process of recovering from Canadian assimilation and my medicine is books. So the first thing I do when I find myself in the stacks is look for Arab literature. I’m always seeking out narratives that can speak to the disjointedness of my seven spice experience. My search results yielded this olive oil green artist book–Where Grape Leaves Grow written by Anna Daliza, and designed by Michelle Kuan and Emi Takahashi. The leaves of the cover fold up neatly like the dolma my mother would stuff and wrap methodically, one after the other, calling me over to help. 

Two hands, with nails painted dark metallic blue, hold a pear-coloured book adorned with small embossed shapes and white squiggly lines. In the background is a leafy sumac shrub.

The text follows two speakers, one lettered in black ink and the other in blue. The former may be a family elder, a kin figure from the homeland, and the blue, a budding new leaf, the newest generation earthed on foreign land. The sparse yet deeply intimate opening exchange sets a funerary tone. Someone or someones have been lost and with them the origin story and cultural connection of our young blue speaker. Stamped between the dialogue of youth and elder are typewritten inscriptions of the chronology of Phoenecian to Lebanese Maronite, of whom Daliza’s family descend from. The pages grow into the telling of the origin story that our young speaker has been thirsting for. 

I’m not Lebanese, like the writer Anna Daliza. I’m Assyrian-Iraqi, but Daliza’s family story is not far off from mine and I feel the same thirst. Both our families are of Christian ethnoreligious minorities, both ladled into the Arab soup, and both descendants of ancient civilizations. Our stories are that of loss and displacement. In fact, no move to Turtle Island is purely vibes-based. Your relation to this land is also one of displacement–either your own or someone else’s. Whether indigenous to this land and forced onto reservations or pushed out of your birthplace due to political turmoil, anthropogenic environmental disasters, or settler colonialism, your story likely involves movement for survival. 

Where Grape Leaves Grow may be Anna Daliza’s debut book, but her writing is that of a practiced storyteller. The text’s historical account parallels, in story and structure, the past and present of her family story, their migration, and loss. As I write this, Lebanon is receiving its umpteenth military assault by a genocidal settler state; a state that prides itself on being a refuge to the exiled and which has consequently created millions of diasporians through its project of forced displacement. In addition to this text’s temporal performance, it explains both a local history and one mirrored by countless other regions and families. I too am a first generation child of Arab parents forced from another place where grape leaves grow, but this story still reads like my own. Daliza, in writing her own family and territorial history, writes many of ours. Like her, many of us did not have the privilege of being passed down our histories, oral or written. My parents left Iraq and their families behind with a few articles of clothing and a plastic bag of photos. In losing her family members, Daliza also loses access to their memories, cultural, and historical knowledge. 

But in a move of self/lineage preservation, Daliza remedies this absence by birthing this book, her own self-published artifact; in crafting her own family mythology, she gifts many of us a blueprint of our own. Where familial memories are lost, we can turn to historical accounts and where archives fall short there are always the stories your elders have repeated a thousand times with untired verve while they sip tea on the sofa, belt unbuckled after a feast of upturned rice. This book is for those of us who live in the liminal space of neither here nor there and who are searching to uncover what was before in order to feel firmly rooted in who we are now. With the guidance of this intimate record, maybe I too will write my story. 

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Call for Participation

Welcome to Dlog, Dick’s blog!

What’s a library without people talking about books? 

We’re thrilled to announce that Dick’s now has a blog!

Dlog is an online space we dreamt up to house our bookish ramblings such as reviews, responses, and personal reflections on texts by trans, non-binary, Two Spirit, and gender non-conforming authors.

Our first post features Ess’ thoughts on Where Grape Leaves Grow, by Anna Daliza. Drawing parallels to their own family’s experiences, Ess shares their appreciation for how Daliza evokes the losses and absences that come with forced migration.

Do you want to write about trans books?

We welcome contributions to the blog! Please get in touch if you’re interested in writing:

  • your reactions to one of the almost 300 books we now have in our catalogue (!!)
  • a recommendation guide, like your favorite zines, poetry books, or books for younger readers in the Dick’s catalogue
  • essays on how queer and trans art, organizing, and/or cultural production relate to collective liberation
  • other things relevant to trans, non-binary, Two Spirit, and gender non-conforming readers and writers and organizers in Tio’tia:ke/Mooniyang/Montreal 

We’re pretty flexible on the length and style for blog posts. We offer all contributors editorial support in the writing process — we are happy to review outlines, drafts, offer feedback, and help you shape your post for publication! And if you’re interested in writing, but want ideas for something to write about, we can also help with that. (Please note that Dick’s is a volunteer collective and contributions to the blog are currently on a voluntary unpaid basis.)

We’re also very open to being pitched on anything else related to our mission that you think would be a good fit for the blog. Get in touch at editorial [at] dickslendinglibrary [dot] com!


Qu’est-ce qu’une bibliothèque sans des gens qui parlent de livres ? 

Nous sommes ravi.e.s d’annoncer que Chez Dick a désormais un blog !

Dlog est un espace en ligne que nous avons imaginé pour héberger nos divagations livresques telles que des critiques, des réponses et des réflexions personnelles sur des textes par des écrivain.e.s trans, non-binaires, bispirituel.le.s et degenre non-conforme.

Notre première publication présente les réflexions d’Ess sur Where Grape Leaves Grow, d’Anna Daliza. En établissant des parallèles avec les expériences de sa propre famille, Ess partage son appréciation pour la façon dont Daliza aborde les pertes et les absences qui découlent des migrations forcées.

Voulez-vous écrire sur les livres trans ?

Les contributions au blog sont les bienvenues ! N’hésitez pas à nous contacter si vous souhaitez écrire :

  • vos réactions à l’un des presque 300 livres que nous avons maintenant dans notre catalogue (!!)
  • un guide de recommandations, comme vos zines, livres de poésie ou livres pour les jeunes lecteur.trice.s préférés dans le catalogue de Chez Dick
  • des essais explorant les liens entre notre libération collective et l’art, l’activisme/militantisme ou la production culturelle queer et trans ‘autre contenu pertinentpour les lecteur.trice.s, écrivain.e.s et organisateur.e.s trans, non-binaires, bispirituel.le.s et de genres non-conforme à Tio’tia:ke/Mooniyang/Montréal.

Nous sommes assez flexibles en ce qui concerne la longueur et le style des articles de blog. Nous offrons à toustes les contributeur.trice.s du soutien éditorial durant le processus d’écriture. Nous sommes heureux.ses de réviser les plans et/ou brouillons, d’offrir des commentaires et de vous aider à façonner votre article pour qu’il soit publié ! Nous pouvons également vous aider si vous êtes intéressé.e.s par l’écriture mais que vous avez besoin d’idées de sujets à aborder.(Veuillez noter que Dick’s est un collectif de bénévoles et que les contributions au blog sont actuellement volontaires et non rémunérées.) 

Nous sommes aussi ouvert.e.s à publier des articles explorant tout autre sujet qui pourrait tomber dans le champ d’intérêt du blog et s’aligner avec la mission de Chez Dick. Contactez-nous à l’adresse editorial [arobase] dickslendinglibrary [dot] com !