Gather the Olives is a dangerous book. That's because it is about peace in a time
when peace in the Holy Land is a faraway, even radical notion. It is about hope
and food and community and the way there can be solidarity in sharing a meal.
Hence the danger: this book might remind its brave readers of how peace is
nourished and how hope can't be extinguished.
Over the years, Bret Lott?the bestselling author
of more than a dozen books, including the novel Jewel (an Oprah's Book
Club selection)?has lived and taught in Jerusalem, affording him the
opportunity to travel throughout Israel and the surrounding area. Now, in Gather
the Olives, this gifted storyteller has brought together a collection of
intimate portraits of the people, the food, and the hope for peace to be found
in a region ravaged by war and conflict.
Through meditations on such varied matters as an
olive oil cooperative run by Israeli and Palestinian women, a non-kosher
butcher shop in the middle of upscale?and very kosher?German Colony, the
nighttime harvesting of olives by Bedouins in downtown Jerusalem, a traditional
Shabbat dinner at an ancient home within the walls of the Old City, a simple
yet beautiful plate of fruit in an office in Ramallah, Bret Lott considers how
food and the people with whom we share it can bring together hearts and souls
in a lasting, meaningful, and peaceful way.