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The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne
The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne













The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne

Toward the end, it becomes cocky, hip and aggressively emotional. It starts out being tentative and defensively emotional. The tone in the novel, written in the first person, shifts considerably from beginning to end. This seems implausible since there was little groundwork laid for it. For example, Theresa seems to be thrown a lifeline by the Kurdish government when her contract with the school is cancelled. One gets the feeling ‘there! everything’s sorted!’ Whereas, there are several crises building up in parallel, and are only resolved in the author’s afterword. My main concern is the last couple of chapters of the novel: they seem hurriedly written without supporting events. The Kurdish Bike gives a startlingly real picture of life, culture and the settings of Kurdistan: generally not a place to visit willingly, but the local characters, while extremely drawn in some cases are nonetheless real and captivating.

The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne

There are two suicides and one murder: plenty of stuff happens. There are issues with FGM, which apparently runs at 95% in Kurdistan. The students are, by and large, the only truly likable characters. The schools manager, Madame, tempts Teresa to stay on for another year, in spite of some emotionally-disturbed management and teaching staff. Meanwhile, Theresa’s stateside finances fall apart owing to the existence of a spend-thrift ex-husband. There is much to-ing and fro’-ing about the marriage, which eventually does take place. Bezma falls in love with Hevar, an egotistical, testosterone-fueled hunk of a man. Theresa obtains a bicycle, as her only means of exploration of the external world in a nearby village, she meets Bezma a single woman of about 30 and her mother Ara, who is both wise and sour. The school has strict regulation of teachers and students, very tight security – wealthy people’s children attend – and some odd characters teaching and working there. The Kurdish Bike is the fictional story of Theresa Turner’s experiences as a freelance English teacher working at a remote, but somewhat prestigious school on a hill top in a remote part of Kurdistan. She lives close to Monterey Bay in California where she loves to boogie board and ride a bicycle.” The author is Alesa Lightbourne, who, according to the biography included in her book “has been an English professor and teacher in six countries, lived on a sailboat, dined with Bedouins, and written for Fortune 50 companies. I bought this book for two reasons: it won the gold medal for the best regional fiction in the Independent Publisher Book Awards, 2017 (I like to know what other indie authors are doing well) at because its setting in Kurdistan (which is part of Iraq, Iran and Turkey) interested me.















The Kurdish Bike by Alesa Lightbourne