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Alia Yunis

Alia Yunis

Here and There All At Once


  • May 25, 2011

    The Right To Drive Well

    I support jailed Saudi Manal Al Sharif’s right to drive.  I support her right to join the men on the roads in her country, a country that has one of the highest car accident fatalities in the world, like most of the countries in the region. See, having spent big chunks of my life in Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, Arts and Culture, bahrain, Dubai, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Middle East, Saudi Arabia, Travel
    Driving, Manal Al Sharif, Middle East, Safety, Saudi Arabia, Women
  • May 16, 2011

    Tor’s Palestinian Photographs: 1967 and 1977

    Today my friend and photographer Tor Eigland sent me two of his photographs as his way of remembering 63 years of the Palestinian Naqba (Catastrophe).  Tor is Norwegian and he’s covered events around the world since the 1960s, but his most amazing stuff is of the Middle East (aside from his photo of Castro on Continue reading

    Arabs, Arts and Culture, Jordan, Lebanon, Middle East, Palestine, Travel
    Naqba, Palestinians, Photography, Tor Eigland
  • May 12, 2011

    Talking Poetry, Not Osama

    Because Abu Dhabi has become such a crossroads of the world since I have lived here, I find myself having a lot of “how did I get here” moments. For example in the years since 9-11, I’ve never sat around picturing where I’d be the day after Osama bin Ladin was put to rest, relatively Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, Arts and Culture, Author, Books, Middle East, Publishing, Travel
    Iowa Writers Programme, poetry, poets
  • May 5, 2011

    The First Female Superhero

    I spoke at TEDx Abu Dhabi last week.  TED is hard, writing is hard–being a superhero is even harder.  But that’s what I talked about at TEDx:  My favorite female superhero, Scherhazade.  I also consider her the first female superheroine.  I’ll post the video in which I explain why when I’m feeling more heroic and Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, Arts and Culture, Author, Books, Islam/Muslim, Middle East
    Arabian Nights, Scherhazade, TEDx
  • May 3, 2011

    Osama’s Other Legacy: Conspiracy Buffs

    Osama Bin Ladin is credited with being the mastermind behind 9/11. But he should also be given credit for giving birth to a world of conspiracy theory masterminds. Whether you believe Osama bin Ladin was indeed the brains of 9/11 or not (I live in the Middle East, remember), whether you are conservative or liberal, Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, Islam/Muslim, Middle East
    conspiracy buffs, Conspiracy Theories, Osama bin Ladin
  • March 25, 2011

    How Teaching Made Me Japanese

    When the earthquake hit Japan, it was as if it had hit one of the many cities I’ve lived in.  The horror of it would have moved even the coldest heart but I also reacted to it–and still react to it– like it had hit so close to home, although I have never lived in Continue reading

    Japan, Middle East, Teaching
    earthquakes, Japan, teaching
  • March 2, 2011

    What Arabs Talk About At Dinner

    On a recent work trip to Kuwait, my American colleague started chuckling while he listened to my Syrian cousin and me arguing about the solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  “Is this what sitting down to dinner with family sounds like in the Middle East?” he asked.  Yep.  Pretty much always unless there is a divorce Continue reading

    Arabs, Arts and Culture, Egypt, Islam/Muslim, Jordan, Lebanon, Middle East, Palestine
    Arabs, Dinner Conversation, Middle, Middle East
  • February 19, 2011

    Bahrain Again

    Since the uprising in Egypt, I’ve been getting e-mails from people asking  me if I’m okay, if I’m safe with everything going on the Middle East.  Safety in the Middle East is just a question of where you are standing at a given moment.  Sadly, I have never known the Middle East not to have Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, bahrain, Dubai, Middle East
    Bahrain, Michael Jackson, UAE
  • February 5, 2011

    Cue the Camels and the Donkeys…and the Cool Cats

    It’s time that we get our Middle East animals straight.  The other day when I was watching men on camels and horseback charge through Tahrir Square in Cairo, whipping demonstrators, I felt like I was witnessing a bad Hollywood remake of Ben Hur or any other “cue the camels” movie depicting battle in the Holy Continue reading

    Abu Dhabi, Arabs, Arts and Culture, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Middle East, Travel
    animals, camels, cats, donkeys, Middle East
  • January 29, 2011

    Egypt, Revolution, and Kushari (Koshari)

    As the people of Egypt rise up against three decades of corruption, they do so very aware of thousands of years of culture that includes the pharaohs, Cleopatra, some of the greatest scholarship and literature of the Arab world, the wonders of the Nile, the Suez Canal, the Aswan Damn—and, perhaps not as internationally renowned Continue reading

    Arabs, Arts and Culture, Egypt, Food, Islam/Muslim, Middle East
    Egypt, koshari, kushari, vegetarian food
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About Alia

Alia Yunis is a writer, journalist and filmmaker. She is currently producing and directing “The Golden Harvest,” a feature length documentary about how olive oil has shaped the Mediterranean culture, cuisine and history for 6,000 years, through war and peace. Her debut novel, The Night Counter (Random House) has been critically acclaimed by the Washington Post, Entertainment Weekly, and several other publications. It was also chosen as a top summer read by the Chicago Tribune and Boston Phoenix. The Boston Globe has called it “wonderfully imaginative…poignant, hilarious.” Alia was born in Chicago and grew up in the U.S., Greece, and the Middle East. She has worked as a filmmaker and journalist in several cities, especially Los Angeles. Her fiction has appeared in several anthologies, including The Robert Olen Butler Best Short Stories collection, and her non-fiction work includes articles for The Los Angeles Times, Saveur, SportsTravel Magazine, and Aramco World. She currently teaches film at Zayed University in Abu Dhabi.

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Recent Posts

  • You Can’t Google the Future
  • A Land and a Camera
  • THE GOLDEN SUMMER
  • Keeping a Full House
  • Early Morning Calls


Recent Posts

  • You Can’t Google the Future
  • A Land and a Camera
  • THE GOLDEN SUMMER

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