"Ujayli's latest novel shines a light on the diversity and complexities of Syria and its people through the eyes of three generations of women in Raqqa." �Ms. Magazine
�In�Summer with the Enemy, the characters are paramount. None of them are typical, much less fit into any stereotype; each opens up a different world of perception. The author, Shahla Ujayli, dedicates her book to �the Raqqa of my memory,� and her characters� personalities, each one uniquely molded, are her main vehicle for recreating the city as it was in the 1980s�seemingly isolated but actually with many ties to the outside world � Instead of focusing on the war or politics, she tells a story of great loves, heartbreaks, betrayals, disputes and reconciliations among family and friends.��The Jordan Times�
�In a beautiful poetic language, the narrator describes her belonging to her homeland, the Euphrates River, which is the reason for existence and destruction at the same time. The feeling of belonging to the place and the story of evacuation, landmines, her mother�s severed legs, the city's destruction, the journey of uprooting, the resettling, and the resilience that comes with hardship are widely shared by millions of displaced people in Syria. This novel speaks for them, empathizes with them, empowers them, and gives them a voice.���Arab World English Journal for Translation and Literary Studies