The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between is a memoir written by Man Booker Prize finalist Hisham Matar. Eloquent and touching, the book follows Matar’s travels to Libya in search of answers to his father’s disappearance. Matar shares gut-wrenching details about his past in Libya, Egypt and England and his present struggle for truth. Matar also explains what happened to his extended family when they dared oppose Muammar Gaddafi. The novel’s prose is stunningly beautiful, and Matar sprinkles in Libyan history to provide needed context and educate readers. My only complaint with this emotionally charged book is that it ends rather suddenly. The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between is heart-breaking yet powerful, as Matar’s writing shines a light on Libya and its war crimes.
This book was sent to Compass Book Ratings for review by Random House
Content Analysis:
Profanity/Language: 3 religious exclamations, 3 mild obscenities, 2 f-word derivatives.
Violence/Gore: A few brief implied occurrences of violence; frequent secondhand reports of violence involving murder, torture, imprisonment, massacre, hangings, stepping on a IED, and other Libyan war crimes; a few brief scenes of violence regarding sheep being slaughtered and gunfights; a few brief non-detailed scenes of violent death included a train crash, bike collision, gunshot wounds and hangings; a brief scene of blood and gore; a few brief scenes of intense violence regarding sniper fire and a prison massacre.
Sex/Nudity: An incident of kissing; a few sexual references regarding prostitutes.
Mature Subject Matter:
Death of family members and friends, war, kidnappings, assassinations, torture, genocide, massacres, concentration camps, desecration of corpses, murder, imprisonment, thoughts of suicide.
Alcohol / Drug Use:
Frequent drinking and smoking.


