<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Gasser Gecko strongly suspects that there must be more to the world than just<br>the Doctor's house and garden where he and his Gecko family live. <p/>Tales told by the Elders on hot summer nights about The World Beyond Our Walls fail to satisfy<br>his curiosity, being based solely on Speculation, so he plucks up his courage and<br>decides to find out for himself! <p/>Auntie Gamalat Gecko would not have approved...<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This is a story about a house gecko, a small reptile commonly found in<br>most homes in Egypt. Gasser, however, is a gecko with gumption, who<br>decides that there must be more to life than scuttling across ceilings and<br>hiding from humans. Refusing to be satisfied with the tales told by the<br>Elders of the family about the World Beyond Our Walls, he decides to take<br>matters into his own hands and find out for himself. <p/>Having practiced a long-distance leap, he times things perfectly so that he<br>lands on the roof of the Doctor's car just as he is about to set off. An array<br>of bewildering sights, including the dazzling Nile he discovers really exists, <br>leave him stunned but exhilarated - and smugly storing it all up to boast<br>about later! <p/>His complacency is shattered when the car abruptly stops and he realises<br>he's trapped in full view of what could be an unfriendly world (geckos are<br>commonly viewed as undesirable in Egypt, a misconception that the story<br>also addresses). His fears prove unfounded, as the kind Doctor not only<br>befriends him, but lets him sit inside the car for the long drive back! <p/>Glimpses of his set-in-their-ways family pepper the story, including his<br>Auntie Gamalat, who was set upon with a broom by the cleaning lady and<br>insisted on regaling anyone who would listen with a blow-by-blow account<br>of her exact feelings when she saw the broom heading her way, and the<br>Elders of the family, fond of spinning tales during the long summer nights. <p/>Gasser returns as a hero, and while shying away from trying insert a<br>'moral' into the story (perish the thought), the underlying theme is the<br>importance of finding things out for yourself, whether it's in Gasser's<br>refusal to take his family's views of the world for granted, or in children's<br>realizing that geckos are harmless little creatures that they can co-exist<br>quite happily with.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Camellia Hamdy is a British-Egyptian writer who penned her first tale at the age of<br>ten. She found an outlet for her love of storytelling by working as an advertising<br>creative, taking pride in weaving a story into each 30-second commercial (preferably a<br>funny one), and picking up a couple of awards in the process. An insatiable curiosity<br>and a pair of eyes as silently watchful as Gasser Gecko's have spawned countless<br>stories which she would now like to share with a circle wider than her children, sister, <br>five friends, and a sympathetic tree. Aly ElZiny is an award-winning Egyptian illustrator born in Alexandria. He is a<br>graduate of Alexandria's Fine Arts University and has worked in the fields of fashion<br>design, interior design, and of course children's literature, for which he has won<br>several awards, including the Lion Art prize in Russia, the Sharjah Children's<br>Literature publishing prize and the Arab Children's Book Publishers Forum prize. You<br>can follow his work on Instagram @AlyElZin
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