[identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
40. Reza Aslan, How to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and the End of the War on Terror

A non-fiction pop book dealing with a wide range of subjects, from the history of the state of Israel, to the difference between Islamist groups like Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood and Jihadist groups like al-Qa'ida (as well as the inaccuracy of referring to al-Qa'ida as any kind of unified group), to historical examples of other 'cosmic wars' such as the Crusades or the Zealot rebellions of the Roman Empire, to the history of Fundamentalist Christianity in the United States, to others. He doesn't always tie these many, many topics together as tightly as one might wish, but if you look at the book as a smorgasbord of various information about the "war on terror", it's a pretty awesome book.

One of my favorite things about Aslan is that he's a much more lyrical, thoughtful writer than I tend to expect from pop non-fiction. Let me quote a paragraph at you: "When I close my eyes, I see white. Strange how synesthetic memory can be. I am certain the insular town of Enid, Oklahoma, where my family alighted three decades ago, was chockablock with buildings, homes, churches, parks. And surely other seasons came and went in the stretch of time we lived there, months when the city's empty streets were not blanketed in snow and the sky did not rumble with dark and silvery clouds. But I remember none of that. Only the clean, all-encompassing whiteness of Enid, Oklahoma, snow as it heaped on the sidewalks, perched on the trees, and settled evenly over the glassy lake." See? How can you not be willing to spend a couple of hundred pages with the man, even if he wasn't telling you fascinating, important things.

Overall, I think I prefer Aslan's other book, No God But God, to this one, but for a broad summary of many things relating to modern Middle Eastern politics and the American response, this book is great.
[identity profile] lady-jem.livejournal.com
I'm new to this community, and was really surprised to see that no one yet had reviewed this book...(at least, it's not tagged under the author, which I admit is where I looked...)

So: 1. A Thousand Splendid Suns, by Khaled Hosseini. His second novel, after The Kite Runners, which I have not read yet but which a few others on this community have read and reviewed.

The novel is set in Afghanistan (Herat for the first part, and mostly Kabul thereafter) and follows the lives of two women set against Afghanistan from the seventies through the early 21st century--the book moves through the Soviet occupation, the Mujahadin, the Taliban, and eventually their defeat and the rebuilding of the city, but it tells of it all from the perspective of women living in Kabul trying to survive and raise their families...I will also say that it was one of the first books I've cried over in probably a decade. 

One other reviewer gently criticized Hosseini's first book for presenting a somewhat skewed, Westernized (or propagandized) view of Afghanistan and the happenings there; I freely admit that my knowledge of the politics and the time is weak, but I thought this was a lovely book and it rang very true and believable to me.  The "voice" of the story reminded me somehow of The Red Tent, though I'm not exactly sure why and the two books really don't have much in common. But I personally found this male author's representation of women's character and heart to be very convincing. (To my surprise, actually!)  And I will definitely read this one again.

(Next up: Saving Fish from Drowning by Amy Tan) (edit: which, if the dead socialite doesn't stop rambling about her own funeral and other stuff so we can get to the story, I won't get far on...this is SLOW going. And I'm sorry, but when an author tells you right up front what the story is going to be about, she's sort of made a contract with you wherein there are only so many pages you're going to read before you expect to go somewhere with the actual story she promised you...)

[identity profile] pene.livejournal.com
I don't remember the last time I reviewed a book. But anyway. Take a deep breath and start reviewing...

1. Held At A Distance, Rebecca Haile

In the wake of a military coup deposing the Emperor, Rebecca Haile moved with her family from Ethiopia to the United States. Twenty five years later Haile is the first in her family to return to Ethiopia. The book is a memoir of her extended family and a travelogue of that trip.

excerpt and review with no real spoilers )

2. Samira and Samir, Siba Shakib

When Samira is born, she is not the son her commander father expected. Mortified, and wanting to save his position and protect his family, her father decides to bring Samira up as a boy.

excerpt and review with no real spoilers )

3. Always and Forever, Beverly Jenkins

Our heroine, Grace Atwood, is a pulled-together banker leading a wagon train of potential brides to a town out West. Our hero, Jackson Blake, is rugged and charming and maddening, but perfect for the job of wagonmaster. So Grace commissions Jackson for the difficult journey.

review with no real spoilers )
[identity profile] kouredios.livejournal.com
I found this community by way of the RaceFail posts, and I'm inordinately happy to be able to contribute something positive other than listening, which I've been doing since January.

These first four books aren't new to me--they are books that I'm currently teaching in the 11th/12th grade English class I teach at a local charter school, the first two of which I have taught many times before as a graduate student TA at UMass Amherst. As such, I'm not sure I'm going to count them towards my 50, but I wanted to post them for others' benefit.

Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart )

Salman Rushdie, Haroun and the Sea of Stories )

Marjane Satrapi, Persepolis )

Khaled Hosseini, The Kite Runner )
That's it, from me, for now.

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