Eli Amir wrote several social novels, primarily focused on the tension between the 'other'—the Iraqi immigrant, the Palestinian, or the Sephardi—and the hegemonic Israeli society. Most of his books were successful and were translated into various languages. His first novel
Scapegoat (1983) is a semi-autobiographical story of Nuri, a 13-year-old immigrant boy from Iraq who is sent to a kibbutz and his absorption into Israeli society. The novel depicts the hardships of absorption experienced by a group of immigrant teenagers, most of them from Iraq, in a kibbutz during the 1950s. It is based on the author's own experiences in his youth. The book powerfully portrays the shock of these young boys as they encounter the new Israeli society and kibbutz ideology. It raises questions concerning religion and secularism, exile versus nationalism and Israeli identity, tradition versus technological openness and intellectual innovation. The novel achieved great success. It is taught in the Israeli high school curriculum, was translated into English and German, and was awarded the Youth Aliyah 50th Anniversary Prize (1984) and the Jewish Literature Prize in Mexico (1985).
The Dove Flyer (aka
Farewell, Baghdad) (1992) is the story of 17-year-old Kabi Imari, an
Iraqi Jewish boy growing up in a
Zionist family. ''Saul's Love
(1998) is a romance between Saul, born to a deeply rooted Sephardi family from Jerusalem, and Chaya, an Ashkenazi holocaust survivor. Jasmine'' (2005) is also largely autobiographical. The book's protagonist, Nuri Amari, who as a child had immigrated with his family from Iraq, is appointed to a government post in
East Jerusalem in the wake of the
Six-Day War. He meets Jasmine, a young
Palestinian widow from a wealthy
Christian refugee family. and was adapted into a play and television series. ==Awards==