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Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    0060505273
  • ISBN-13:
    9780060505271
  • PUB. DATE:
    February 2004
  • PUBLISHER:
    HarperCollins Publishers
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Sewing Circles of Herat: A Personal Voyage Through Afghanistan by Christina Lamb, Van Dusen (Editor)

$13.99 List Price
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Customer Reviews

Opened my eyes, mind, and heart to the real people of Afghanistanby mattman22

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Christina Lamb has done a wonderful job writing of her travels through Afghanistan, during Russian occupation and after the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Her stories of meeting real Afghans who are just trying to survive in a war-torn country that has lost its history during the reign of the Taliban are enlightening, saddening, and warming. While reading this you discover the real people of Afghanistan,...

Should be required reading...by Anonymous

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for every American, especially politicians, journalists, and those whose loved ones are there now. A part of the world that most of us know nothing about comes alive via Lamb's brilliant prose. Unforgettable characters -- real people, not the cardboard stereotypes forced at us by the American Corporate Media and the Bushies. A complicated and fascinating history of a 'nation' like no other, interwoven...

Overview -

Sewing Circles of Herat

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: February 2004
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Sales Rank: 698,159

Synopsis

Twenty-one-year-old Christina Lamb left suburban England for Peshawar on the frontier of the Afghan war. Captivated, she spent two years tracking the final stages of the mujaheddin victory over the Soviets, as Afghan friends smuggled her in and out of their country in a variety of guises.

Returning to Afghanistan after the attacks on the World Trade Center to report for Britain's Sunday Telegraph, Lamb discovered the people no one else had written about: the abandoned victims of almost a quarter century of war. Among them, the brave women writers of Herat who risked their lives to carry on a literary tradition under the guise of sewing circles; the princess whose palace was surrounded by tanks on the eve of her wedding; the artist who painted out all the people in his works to prevent them from being destroyed by the Taliban; and Khalil Ahmed Hassani, a former Taliban torturer who admitted to breaking the spines of men and then making them stand on their heads.

Christina Lamb's evocative reporting brings to life these stories. Her unique perspective on Afghanistan and deep passion for the people she writes about make this the definitive account of the tragic plight of a proud nation.

Publishers Weekly

Expelled from Afghanistan by the Taliban for her reporting, award-winning British journalist Lamb returned after the September 11 attacks to observe the land and its people firsthand. Through interviews with locals, Lamb paints a vivid picture of Taliban rule and offers a broader sense of life devastated by two decades of war. Her well-written and moving account also reveals the heroism of the Afghans, who not only survived but also resisted their Soviet occupiers; clandestine literary circles and art preservation techniques, for example, helped Afghans salvage their education and history from total destruction. Yet this is more than a chronicle of everyday Afghan life. Lamb's probing interviews with Afghan warlords, former members of the Taliban and other influential personalities ignored by the Western media fill a gaping hole in research on the ideologies and perspectives of these actors. Her encounters with Pakistani Taliban patrons Sami-ul-Haq and Hamid Gul shed light on Pakistan's support for the Taliban. Lamb could have strengthened her account by utilizing her impressive research to further explain Afghanistan's poorly understood local rulers. Moreover, her occasional use of sensationalist language to describe Afghan suffering belittles the gravity of the situation, and her attempts to intersperse the country's complicated history with the present situation may also confuse unfamiliar readers. Nevertheless, her work leaves one with a powerful sense of what the Afghan people have endured and sheds light on the local leaders who have shaped Afghanistan's recent history. Illus. (On sale Dec.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Biography

"War wasn't beautiful at all. It was the ugliest thing I had ever seen.... It was about the people -- the sons and daughters, the mothers and fathers." So writes Christina Lamb in The Sewing Circles of Herat -- a chronicle of Lamb s time in the late 1980s as a foreign correspondent covering the Afghanistan-Soviet clash, and the days she spent there after September 11, 2001.

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