How does it feel to be an alien at home? . . . Sardonic, monstrous, tender, these well-crafted tales show us circumstances that might be our own, and let us see them through the eyes of others. * Sunday Times *
Dima Alzayat's startling, often shocking stories have at their heart a profound sense of dislocation . . . Brilliant. * Daily Mail *
Alligator contains several stories of breathtaking power . . . Start reading now and you can say you were an early fan, because Dima Alzayat combines superb writing with razor-sharp imagination and focuses on social injustice, racial violence, and global immigration. * LitHub *
Gloriously hypnotic. These charged, visceral stories get under the skin and stay there. This collection heralds the arrival of an electrifying new voice. -- Irenosen Okojie
Tremendously assured, wise-cracking and elegiac . . . [A] wonderful collection that will resonate with anyone who has ever felt caught between cultures, places and the interstices of memory and the loaded everyday. -- Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti
Alligator and Other Stories is heartfelt, heartbreaking and heart-mending. It's also razor sharp on the shifting layers of history, family, faith, gender, culture and language that make up that strange thing we call 'identity'. An important, necessary book. -- Jenn Ashworth, author of A Kind of Intimacy
This is a wonderful collection, exceptional in fact. Its consideration of displacement and identity is so nuanced, intelligent and tender, and its modes of telling so dextrous, apt and beautiful. In Alligator and other Stories, lives are captured with care and formidable compassion. -- Wendy Erskine, author of Sweet Home
Dima Alzayat's stories are nuanced, unusual and emotionally lacerating. Hers is a voice that is both vital and haunting. -- Stuart Evers
In the debut short story collection Alligator, author Dima Alzayat proves herself an incredible literary chameleon, writing across history, nationality, gender and age with deep nuance and empathy. -- Dana Czapnik, author of The Falconer
Alzayat's slim, powerful debut collection showcases the author's deep empathy and imagination in stories about grief, assimilation, and trauma . . . This intelligent collection is a force to be reckoned with. * Publishers Weekly, starred review *
The richly detailed short fictions in this debut from a Damascus-born scribe form an intricate, breathtaking mosaic of modern Muslim life. * O Magazine *
The collection yields hit after hit, with Alzayat navigating shifts in style, tone and structure with ease. * Big Issue *
Reflective, nostalgic, griefstricken, harrowing. Alzayat's work circles power and politics, but at its centre are people: their relationships, their pasts, their homes. * Mslexia *