<B>Shortlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction, <I>The Dispersal </I>is a timely and insightful novel about displacement, loss, poetry, war, and migration from a leading Arab voice.</B><BR><BR><I>Tashari</I>, the title of the novel in Arabic, is an Iraqi word for a shot from a hunting rifle, which scatters creatures in all directions. The word <I>tashari </I>expresses the scattering of Iraqis as a people across the globe and the separation from home and loved ones that pursues them.<I><BR></I><BR><BR><I><BR></I><BR><BR><I>The Dispersal</I>, follows the career of Wardiyah Iskander, a physician working in the Iraq countryside in the 1950s. Delivering babies and tending to the many health needs of her rural women patients, she struggles to improve care for them. But as the years pass, the upheavals the country faces continue to worsen. Her family, like many others, is pressed to leave. Wardiyah finally goes, arriving in France. There her poet niece helps her now elderly aun