|
Home
Browse Sections
Recent Searches
|
|
|
| You are here : HOME > Middle East |
| |
 |
Tea with Hezbollah: Sitting at the Enemies Table Our Journey Through the Middle East
Price : $22.99 $11.49
Features
: - ISBN13: 9780307588272
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Average
Customer Rating :     |
|
Editorial Review :
Is it really possible to love one’s enemies?
That’s the question that sparked a fascinating and, at times, terrifying journey into the heart of the Middle East during the summer of 2008. It was a trip that began in Egypt, passed beneath the steel and glass high rises of Saudi Arabia, then wound through the bullet- pocked alleyways of Beirut and dusty streets of Damascus, before ending at the cradle of the world’s three major religions: Jerusalem.
Tea with Hezbollah combines nail-biting narrative with the texture of rich historical background, as readers join novelist Ted Dekker and his co-author and Middle East expert, Carl Medearis, on a hair-raising journey. They are with them in every rocky cab ride, late-night border crossing, and back-room conversation as they sit down one-on-one with some of the most notorious leaders of the Arab world. These candid discussions with leaders of Hezbollah and Hamas, with muftis, sheikhs, and ayatollahs, with Osama bin Laden’s brothers, reveal these men to be real people with emotions, fears, and hopes of their own. Along the way, Dekker and Medearis discover surprising answers and even more surprising questions that they could not have anticipated—questions that lead straight to the heart of Middle Eastern conflict.
Through powerful narrative Tea With Hezbollah will draw the West into a completely fresh understanding of those we call our enemies and the teaching that dares us to love them. A must read for all who see the looming threat rising in the Middle East.
Customer Review :
Entertaining, Educational and Ultimately Frustrating
If you want to learn something about Middle Eastern politics, so that you're not speaking from a really uneducated point of view, this is a really entertaining, thrill-ride through Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Beirut and Israel. Along the way, the narrator talks to some of Bin Ladin's brothers, a Bedouin prince, Muslim scholars, Hezbollah, boat pilots and cabdrivers, pacifists in Israel, Orthodox Jews and even the keeper of the key to what Christians call "Golgotha", or the site of the Crucifixion.
This is really neat, and very memorable. It has a couple of storylines: our narrator and his friend travel through several countries in the Middle East asking a similar set of questions, "What kind of car do you drive?" "What makes you laugh?" "What makes you cry?"
There is also a more personal storyline about a young woman of Arabic descent trying to find her biological father in Beirut; this thread focuses on local politics and the conflicts between them--in fact, it's one of the most effective narratives in the book because the author ultimately uses it to humanize the various factions.
However, there is a really big, "Um, yeah, we knew that." element to this entire book: the set of questions asked of Arab leaders, and the more personal storyline are designed to make the reader think, that even in the midst of really complex political problems, we're all a lot alike.
You wouldn't need to travel through the Arab world to find that out: I found myself wondering if the author had ever bothered to spend any time with Middle Easterners in the United States. (I passed college Trig because of an Iraqi math grad student--it's not like it's that hard.)
The book itself, though is fun to read: the Arab world seems like an interesting place to visit and the author does a really good job of describing it, although even here, it's not very sympathetic to the subject matter. The author is very good at scaring the heck out of you in his narrative. He spends a lot of time (perhaps reasonably, as a journalist) talking about his fear of being kidnapped.
More troubling, though is the author's take on the Arab world: he goes out of his way to get his subjects to agree with Christian doctrine in such a way that it's like he's trying to prove that Christian beliefs are universal. The author goes to great lengths to say that he is a Christian, and to ask, in his set of questions, "What do you think of Jesus' teachings that say you should love your neighbor as you love yourself?", thereby establishing that virtually everyone would at least nominally agree that Arab extremists who are terrorists should maybe stop taking hostages, and maybe the U.S. should get out of Iraq and stop "accidentally" killing civilians, and both the Israeli military and Hamas should rethink some of the random and brutal retaliation thing.
"Yeah, we knew that."
Platitudes aside, the author even acknowledges that nothing in the Middle East is simple; and then, strangely, he concludes the book with the idea that we "should all just follow the teachings of Jesus and get along."
Inherently, he's right--and yet, he had to parse the idea, that fighting in the Middle East is maybe not so good, in such a way that the conclusion is offensive to his narrative subject. He doesn't seem to be aware that there is a problem with quoting Christ to solve the problems among the multi-factioned Arab/Jewish/Jewish Splinter-Group/Arab Splinter Group/Christian/Christian splinter-groups.
Still, this is fun to read. It's also kind of annoying, although it's a lot less painful to get through than many other books on the subject. Ironically, though, it's a book about the Arab world that is ultimately pro-Christian.
Rating :    
A Mixed Review
I was given the opportunity to review Tea with Hezbollah by Ted Dekker and Carl Medaris. The following is my review:
If you have read any of Ted Dekker's novels, you are aware that you won't ever pick one up and find a normal read. Ted probably has one of the most imaginative minds in all of evangelical literature. Some of his work, especially his latest stuff, has tended to the dark side and has turned off some evangelical readers. Nevertheless, Ted is a first-class writer and an excellent wordsmith.
So when I was given the opportunity to review his nonfiction work, Tea with Hezbollah, I jumped at the chance. It's an interesting read. On one level, it's a remarkable sort of travelogue into the world of some of America's feared enemies. Ted interviews leaders in Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Cairo, Syria, and Palestine. He met with leaders of Hezbollah, Hamas, and many of the most influential Muslim clerics in the world.
I came away with a profound sense of the complexity of the Arab world. It's a world too many Americans and too many Christians sort of put together in a caricature as "radical Islam," as though every single Arab and every single Muslim is dangerous and a terrorist. That is a paper-thin assessment.
Ted does well to dive into the complexities of Islam and also the struggles of Christians who live in Muslim worlds. To his credit, Ted doesn't claim to be an expert in their theology or in their culture. He's merely an observer and a scared one at that.
I give him enormous credit for traveling where few will go. I mean many Christians won't even go to Israel, where it is much safer than some of the places Ted traveled. But we ignore that part of the world to our peril and I think it does a great disservice to the Body of Christ if we marginalize those areas as being unreachable or unlovable.
So I recommend Ted's book as a beginning education on the complexities of the Middle East. However, there was a thread that ran through this book that bothered me greatly as an evangelical Christian who holds to the truth of Scripture.
Ted's entire thesis is that the three major religions--Muslim, Jewish, Christian struggle to practice the words of Jesus, which are to love your neighbor. He claims many times that these radical words are why they killed Jesus. But this is really not faithful to Scripture. Jesus was killed because HE claimed to be the Son of God, the Savior of the world. Jesus was killed because Jesus laid down his life for the salvation of mankind's sin. Jesus died for the Gospel. Not to be a Gandhi-like figure that would sit everyone in a wonderful circle and make sure they got along. In fact, Jesus said he came not to bring peace, but a sword.
Ted also seems to think here is symmetry between the world religions. A creeping universalism courses through this book. If you read this, you might easily come away thinking that all religions have merit, all are valid paths to God.
Lastly, I think his diagnosis of the world's root problems is simplistic and, I might say, unscriptural. True, Christians have done things in the name of Christ that are horrific. Christians have committed atrocities. But the root problem of the world is sin, began in the Garden and continuing to weave its destructive path through history. And the world hates Christianity, primarily because Jesus predicted we would be hated. Not because there is something wrong with our faith or because we haven't been nice. The solution for the world's ills is the Gospel and the future for the world is peace, but only the peace brought when Jesus, the Prince of Peace returns.
So do I recommend this book? I do actually. Not for its theology, but for the incredible insights Ted and Carl bring to the Arab world. Christians ought not to be caught up in irrational hatred of certain people groups, no matter how easy and humorous that is. We should be compelled by the love of Christ to see these people won over with the Gospel. We should be active in building up the faith of Christian brothers and sisters who suffer in these lands.
So read Tea with Hezbollah, but read with Biblical discernment.
Rating :     
Not really what I thought it would be
Tea with Hezbollah is said to combine nail-biting narrative with the texture of rich historical background as the authors travelled through the Middle East having conversations with some of the most notorious leaders of the Arab world - Hezbollah, Hamas, Osama bin Laden's brothers, etc. The premise is that we will be surprised to discover that these men are real people with emotions, fears, and hopes much like the ones we have. Having lived in the Middle East for several years, I had trouble being surprised that the men interviewed turned out to be real people, no matter how much we are in disagreement with the policies they may espouse. The real focus of the book to me is the similarities among people in different areas of the world. I think we often concentrate too much on our differences.
I liked the idea of this book. I just found that it didn't really have enough substance.
Rating :   
Brilliant reflection on the parable of the Good Samaritan
The parable of the Good Samaritan is taught so often in Christian churches that our reaction is often automatic. "Good samaritan" - "Love your neighbor", what's next? But there is considerable depth to this story of an outcast who saves his enemy, after the religious leaders and scholars of the day walk by without helping. The authors here look at the story in light of the Middle East, both the current historical moment and the layers of history that go reach back to the days of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The story is told in two plots. First, we are told of the authors' own journey thru the modern Middle East seeking out leaders of Radical Islamic thought and practice - the men whose writings may have inspired Al-Qeada and the 9/11 plot. These people are asked about their own humanity, and about Jesus's teaching to love your neighbor. Second, we are told the story of "Nicole", a woman seeking her father in modern Beirut, whose story eventually parallels that of the victim in the story of the Good Samaritan. The two plots are used to accentuate each other, and bring out different aspects of history and culture. They eventually come together to show just how radical Jesus's teaching was and continues to be today. And to show that even after the assassinations of Jesus, Ghandi, and Martin Luther King, there are still a few radicals ready to put non-violence to work to fight for peace and good.
Fair warning, the story of "Nicole" is presented in the body of the book as fact, then admitted at the end to be merely a parable of the author's own choosing. This may be off-putting to some, and I'd argue the story would have been equally effective if he had admitted up-front that it was "inspired by true stories."
Overall, this is a brilliant book and should be required reading for any serious Christian or anyone trying to understand the minds behind radical Islam.
Rating :     
Too much talk, not enough listening
When I first heard the basic concept for this book, I was curious and excited to read it...
Take two American evangelicals and send them to visit the Middle East. Provide them access to a truly remarkable network of contacts and give them a simple set of questions to ask. Stand back and watch the worldviews shift and rearrange.
Which is apparently what happened, and I'm glad. There are a number of ways it could have gone much worse.
Maybe I should just stop there, but having just finished the book, some things are fresh in my mind:
- The amped-up, "high-energy" writing style is inappropriate to the subject matter. This is a complicated topic and an incredible opportunity. But instead of getting to the point, the author spends much too much time talking about himself and his fears. Here's a sample:
"I am a writer cursed with powers of observation and even greater powers of imagination, and by this point a hundred or so scenarios were now so real to me that our driver became the kidnapper, whisking us away to a compound where we would spend the next ten years until the United States finally broke down and sent Rambo to free us."
Maybe he's trying to get me to identify with his feelings, but I just wanted him to get out of the way so I could listen to the people he was talking to. I felt like I was reading all the outtakes and missing the real story.
- In chapter 4 and woven throughout the rest of the book, a side story about a woman named Nicole is introduced, which quickly becomes the most interesting part of the narrative. We are supplied with names, dates, places, and events, and given to believe that she is a real person with an extraordinary story. Her life becomes a powerful example of the story of the Good Samaritan. Except that it's not true. In fact, she's entirely made up. On the second to the last page of the book, Dekker writes, "Along the way I'd reached into my most reliable source, my own imagination, to relive the parable of the Samaritan...or as you've come to know it, Nicole's story."
At this point, I almost threw the book across the room. Wasn't there one, true story to be found among all the conversations that could have served the purpose? And if it is truly impossible to find a Good Samaritan in the real world, why didn't we spend some time talking about that, instead of making up a complicated fiction to fill the space?
- I had other disagreements with the structure and style, but maybe I should just make my point: I have traveled in some of the same parts of the world and have had similar conversations. I have seen the complexity of the problems and felt some of the frustration that comes from trying to find answers. But I have also seen grace at work in some of these same dark places. I believe there is hope, but it only comes with great sacrifice and great love. And I believe that Dekker actually stumbled into it again and again throughout his journey.
But instead of realizing this, the book ended with a shrug, "Love is the only solution, and nobody does it well. Not Christians, not Muslims, not Jews, not me." It made me sad because it seemed to me that the author had, in fact, found what he was looking for and then tossed it away. The fact that he sat down face to face with people that our government calls terrorists and was treated with respect and hospitality is astounding and beautiful. I just wish that, after all that, we could have really listened to what they had to say.
[Note: This book was provided for review by the WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group.]
Rating :  
More
reviews...
|
 |
The Bread of Angels: A Journey to Love and Faith
Price : $24.95 $12.47
Features
: - ISBN13: 9780385522007
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Average
Customer Rating :      |
|
Editorial Review :
A gorgeous, romantic memoir of a young woman's year in Damascus, where she studied the Muslim Jesus, fled to an ancient desert monastery to heal her past, and unexpectedly found herself in love with a French novice monk.
In 2004, twenty-seven-year-old Stephanie Saldaña traveled to Damascus, Syria, on a Fulbright fellowship to study the role of the prophet Jesus in Islam. She was also fleeing a broken heart. It was not an ideal time to be an American in the Middle East-the United States had recently invaded Iraq, refugees were flooding into Damascus, and dark rumors swirled that Syria might be next to come under American attack. Miserable and lonely, Stephanie left Damascus to visit an ancient Christian monastery carved into the desert cliffs. In that beautiful, austere setting, she confronted her wavering faith and met Frederic, a young French novice monk. As they set out to explore the mysteries entwining Christianity and Islam, Stephanie slowly realized that she had found God again-and that she was in love with Frederic. But would Frederic choose God or Stephanie?
The Bread of Angels sweeps readers into the violent extremes of a war-torn region and renews their belief in faith, self-discovery, and the possibility of true love.
Customer Review :
A thought provoking journey
The Bread of Angels is an absolutely wonderful book. I feel as if I know the author personally and was there to take the journey with her. It is clear that Stephanie is a scholar of language, poetry, and faith as her writing flows beautifully, creating strong images and evoking strong emotions. Although the place Stephanie finds herself and the journey she undertakes were so foreign to me, Stephanie manages to convey our essential human similarities even in the midst of the differences. She shows us her own initial discomfort with her surroundings and her human failings as she struggles with matters of faith. Stephanie clearly examines her own Christian beliefs while learning about the Islamic version of Jesus. She studies Arabic and spends a month praying in a desert monastery. Stephanie's desire to find her true calling, her life's path, takes her on a journey that most of us cannot imagine but she is able to make it real through her honest prose. She does not try to hide her doubts or her confusion as she moves through a year of difficult lessons. The Bread of Angels is a book to meditate with and digest slowly, not one to be rushed through. It is a book that will provoke thought, emotion, and wonder as you embark on your own journey in the Middle East.
Rating :     
I wanted to like this book
I was set to enjoy this memoir, as Eastern Christianity, the Jesus of the Quran, and contemporary monasticism are serious interests of mine. While it has its bright moments, ultimately it disappoints.
Saldana writes beautifully and one can see her background as a poet. She is at her best in her thick, almost tangible descriptions of her life in Damascus. One gets an authentic feel for the city and its people.
However, the book slides in the second half. I found myself lost in a dizzying (if not erratic) emotional drama of religious experience and romantic infatuation. I fought back the urge to read diagonally to get through it, and lost any sense for the actual events happening outside the author's head.
Saldana is young, and perhaps this book is her novice work. Her writing shows that she is capable of more, and I will be watching for what is next.
Rating :   
Too Religious for My Reading Taste
Stephanie Saldana's emotional and beautifully written memoir of her year's time spent in the exotic middle eastern city of Damascus in Syria, is written with a delicate and emotional hand. Although it is very well penned, and although I found her command of the language extremely accomplished and polished, this story was just not for me. I chose this book as an Amazon Vine monthly choice to review because I love reading about the middle east and had yet to read anything that took place in Syria. I was hoping to learn more about the culture and people or landscapes of Syria, and while reading this memoir found very little of that to keep my interest up. Bread of Angels could be compared to the bestseller Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert in the sense that this is a journey of self discovery and renewal of a young woman's life who desperately needed to turn her chaotic empty world around and to finding meaning in our short existence on this earth.
Stephanie went to Syria on a scholarship to write and finish her dissertation on the differences and meeting of the minds of the topic of Christianity and Islam in the middle east. She researches what each religious belief has to offer and witnesses the many instances where the two faiths come together meeting half way, letting each blend together in the churches, people and monasteries of Damascus. At the same time Stephanie begins her own religious search and questions her own depths of faith as she struggles with joining in the Spiritual Exercises within a Catholic, Arab speaking monastery in the desert. Finding herself, questioning her past sins, and inability to find love and settle down to a somewhat happy existence in life, is the heart of what this poignant and poetic memoir is about.
I am not a religious person in any way but do find it interesting to learn about other people's faiths and how they feel it benefits them. I have always found the middle eastern culture very curious to read about, but just couldnt get interested in Stephanie's plight, or find her story worth reading because for me it did dive too deeply in her conversations and beliefs of God and the church. The first half of the book remained interesting until about half way through I began to lag and struggle with the book as it got more and more religious. So for me, I couldn't finish it as I found myself trying too hard to read about things I myself do not believe in.
However for people who do have strong religious beliefs, and enjoy reading about other people who are struggling to find their way in life and using religion to enhance it, this is a truly wonderful story about a woman lost in the hustle and bustle of life who works hard at slowing down to find a way through to finding love, happiness and a peace within herself that she can feel comfortable with. Bread of Angels IS a great book for those that can put themselves in Stephanie's shoes, and who might find interest in the debate of Islam vs Christianity. Stephanie is an excellent writer and tells her story well. The book was simply just not a good selection for my own reading tastes.
With these comments, I normally would not have chosen to even review the book, but as it was a monthly Vine member selection, I have no choice but to review the Advance Reading Copies I choose. Also too, when we Vine members get the newsletter to select books to review, the blurbs describing the books are not always clear enough to get an accurate accessment on what the book is truly about. The blurb for this book did not mention the depth of religious content Bread of Angels would have, and almost described it to be more of a travel essay which is why I chose it to try reading.
Rating :   
Love this book
Give yourself a treat and get this book. It's a wonderful read. It was a tad slow at first, but after a few chapters, you'll find yourself glued to her story. This book reminds me of the epic stories of redemtion, like Les Miserables and Gone with the Wind, but on a smaller scale--though no less moving. The book is a real treat.
Rating :     
The sensitive heart of the poet in the Middle east and how it alters her life
The author, Stephanie Saldana has lived a remarkable life, travled to remarkable places and produced a remarkable book mostly about herself reflected amid the ancient streets, homes, and people of Syria.
Through her eyes emerges a picture of a land that most of us have little first hand information about and a lot of preconceived ideas, but her protrait is intensely human and astonishingly touching.
She sees the details of life and this slows the narative and while I generally dislike this trait in a book, I found, under her skilled pen, this to be very endearing trait as the reader moves page by page though the story actually tasting the food and feeling the heat and sand; and yes, sharing her heart breaks. Make no mistake, this is a deeply intorspective and troubled young woman with remarkable talents and the ability to show others in her words, what she has seen and experienced.
She is a seeker and becomes and modern mystic - a person searching for God. We share her spiritual struggles and failures and end the end...well I will not spoil it for you, but you will like this woman, want to spend time with her, and enjoy every moments in Bread of Angels.
Rating :     
More
reviews...
|
 |
The Places In Between
Price : $14.00 $3.50
Features
: - ISBN13: 9780156031561
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Average
Customer Rating :     |
|
Editorial Review :
In January 2002 Rory Stewart walked across Afghanistan-surviving by his wits, his knowledge of Persian dialects and Muslim customs, and the kindness of strangers. By day he passed through mountains covered in nine feet of snow, hamlets burned and emptied by the Taliban, and communities thriving amid the remains of medieval civilizations. By night he slept on villagers' floors, shared their meals, and listened to their stories of the recent and ancient past. Along the way Stewart met heroes and rogues, tribal elders and teenage soldiers, Taliban commanders and foreign-aid workers. He was also adopted by an unexpected companion-a retired fighting mastiff he named Babur in honor of Afghanistan's first Mughal emperor, in whose footsteps the pair was following.
Through these encounters-by turns touching, con-founding, surprising, and funny-Stewart makes tangible the forces of tradition, ideology, and allegiance that shape life in the map's countless places in between.
Customer Review :
Excellent Read
This book is a fascinating personal perspective of Afghanistan. Stewart allows his readers the opportunity to appreciate the human element of a war torn country as he tells his story of a journey on foot from Herat to Kabul. His insights are a refreshing take on the region and include the historical, political, anthropological, cultural and social strengths of this beautiful country.
I commend Stewart for his resilience and motivations to complete his walking journey through this politically unstable region of the world. This personal journey is an intriguing and inspirational story that will captivate anyone who reads it. This said, it is a book I own multiple copies of and have lent and given to a large number of friends, family and travelers- all of whom have also thoroughly enjoy it.
Rating :     
More about "the places" than the "in betweens"
Some things don't require explanation. People just do things, perhaps on impulse or some hidden private passion. But partaking in something as daring as walking for twenty months on foot through potentially dangerous territory would, it seems, necessitate some fundamental reason for doing so. But maybe not? In any case, Scottish journalist explorer turned Parliamentary candidate Rory Stewart set out on such a journey in 2001. His bipedal voyage was chronicled in "The Places In Between," which was hailed as a masterpiece and has helped put Stewart into the Academic (he now holds a chair at Harvard) and political spotlight (he is campaigning as a Conservative Party MP). Maybe his walk was inspired merely by the desire to "be somebody?" A sort of distinguishing for the marketplace? Whatever the reasoning behind it, the book's first line provides no illumination: "I'm not good at explaining why I walked across Afghanistan. Perhaps I did it because it was an adventure." He was thankfully good enough at explaining it to Afghans who allowed him to trudge through their volatile war-torn country. Stewart told them that he's retracing the steps of the 16th century Mughal Emperor Babur, that he's writing a book, that he's a history professor, he basically told them whatever he needed to tell them to maintain his quest. Sometimes, and he admits this openly, he lied to secure lodging or to avoid threats. One salient feature about his journey is the amount of tall tales told by Stewart and his companions along the way. One of Stewart's guides tells suspicious visitors that he is an American, and that his metal tipped walking stick can summon American helicopters at a moment's notice. They subsequently leave him alone. At another time a guide tells a host that Stewart is a doctor. More than once Stewart claims that he's an important personal friend of such and such powerful person, which allows him to scramble out of some tough spots. He wisely dodges some questions about his belief in Islam, but when pushed he gives a very Islamic interpretation of Christianity to questioners. This method never gets him in trouble. So apparently a fair amount of truth bending is required for a foreigner to pass through Afghanistan. This isn't surprising considering the state of that country.
Those seeking an ultimate reason for Stewart's journey may remain frustrated throughout the book. They will nonetheless encounter a highly charged and very readable narrative of what must have been a harrowing and perspective-building experience. The trip starts at Herat in western Afghanistan and grinds slowly through rough terrain all the way to Kabul to the far east. Along the way Stewart encounters the good, the bad, the beautiful and the ugly. He meets very few women, veiled or unveiled, and their sighting provides a litmus test for the tolerance of a region. Once he enters a room to see women fly into the shadows. He receives some of the best treatment in places where women appear openly in public. On the last leg of his journey, in Al-Qaeda and Taliban territory, he gets punched in the face and threatened with physical violence. Some amazing landmarks also appear, such as the mysterious Minaret at Jam. He falls down its spiral staircase. People at Jam tell him about excavations, mostly mercenary, in the hills surrounding the minaret. They find antiquities which lead them to believe that Jam was the legendary "Turquoise Mountain." In Chist-e_Sharif he sees the famous hollowed out domes. And at Bamiyan he sees the empty mountain crevices that once held the enormous Buddha statues destroyed by the Taliban. Those sites alone were probably worth the trip. In Dahan-e-Rezak he is given a maltreated dog he names Babur and who accompanies him until sickness prompts Stewart to ask Doctors Without Borders officials to drive Babur to Kabul. Stewart eventually catches up with him, but Babur's fate remains uncertain until the epilogue. The walk ends in ravaged Kabul where a local, mistaking him for an Arab, warns him that he just can't walk into Kabul "there are British and American soldiers ahead." He meets up with a well fed Babur in Kabul.
Though "The Places in Between" provides for great travel writing, it does not present a complete or even clear picture of Afghanistan or its people. The book is really about the author's journey. True, those who know nothing about the country will pick up some interesting tidbits, but this isn't an anthropology or an in-depth study in any sense of the word. It's a travelogue, and a highly entertaining one. Those looking for detailed analysis of Afghanistan should look elsewhere. Though he meets many interesting people, Stewart does not see or speak with enough people to consider his story representative of Afghanistan. He spends most of his time walking in unpopulated areas. Also, Stewart himself does not really emerge from the narrative. His focus remains on telling the story of the journey, not on personal introspection, though some of this does appear in smatterings. This somewhat belies the title, which evokes uninhabited landscapes where Stewart did in fact spend most of his time. But ultimately, the book spends more time on "the places" than on the "in betweens." Still, anyone looking for an intriguing story about a lone person in unknown territory will find a good read here. And perhaps we'll hear more about Stewart if he wins the Parliamentary seat and maybe someday he'll either figure out or reveal why he set out on this Quixotic quest.
Rating :    
The place in between
Firstly, once I FINALLY received the product, it was in almost mint condition. So that was definitely a plus. The downside, however, was that it took almost a month for it to come, no big deal if you're not in a hurry, though, extraordinarily annoying otherwise.
Rating :    
Poignant and poetic
Mr. Stewart's writing style is not lyrical yet it can be said to be poetic, evoking emotions and images of the country through which he walked. All too often, the only images we have of Afghanistan are of war and repression of women. Walking across Afghanistan shortly after the fall of the Taliban, Mr. Stewart writes of a country re-awakening, full of hope for the future, and marked by the years of war...the changes to the culture, the scars on the land-scape. The book is all the more poignant given the subsequent abandoning of the country by the US to focus on Iraq and the inevitable decline in to chaos again. Mr. Stewart paints a vivid yet un-romanticised pottrait of the people, and changing culture of resilient peoples. ùit is not a book about politics or nation-building, but a bok about people and places...the you and I of another place. It is a must-read for anyone who has ever heard the name Afghanistan on the evening news.
Rating :     
Following in Babur's footsteps
"The Places in Between" is the chronicle of Rory Stewart's journey by foot from Herat to Kabul, accompanied by nothing else but the occasional villager or passing soldier and his local dog, named Babur. This is a fitting name because Stewart, who would later be appointed to an important government post in occupied Iraq (The Prince of the Marshes: And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq), not only wants to explore the beautiful Afghan landscape but also study the traces of its history in the present. The original Babur was one of the few leaders in Afghan history who had united the whole territory and who considered it central to his empire, and he is particularly interesting because he left an autobiographical text which is remarkable for its honesty, its objectivity, and its insight into the norms of those days. With these two Baburs, knowledge of local language and customs, and a bag full of medication, Rory Stewart sets out to traverse the sublime deserts and snow-capped mountains of central Afghanistan.
The tale is very well written and makes for easy and highly compelling reading. It is a telling fact that he makes his journey, which consists in essence out of endlessly repeated harsh day marches from one village chief's tent to the next, interesting to people who have never even been near the area. Stewart is very nonjudgmental overall, probably in part because he is entirely reliant on the kindness of strangers (who are often as hostile as they are hospitable to travellers) in the classic manner of travel writing. The book sheds some light on the highly complicated chain of political and ethnic conflicts within Afghanistan - almost every Afghan male has fought in at least one, if not more, war in the country. It is clear that loyalties are usually not quite as clear-cut as one would like them to be in order to understand them: very often the same feudal lords who had opposed the Taliban later joined them, and sometimes Iran-supported islamists are the greatest enemies of local chieftains, and so forth. Stewart's book does not really delve into political analysis, but certainly shows 'ad oculos' what the real meaning of politics is in Afghanistan.
All this is not to say that Stewart is necessarily an entirely reliable guide. The American edition of the book indicates that Rick Loomis took pictures of him along the way, but having a cameraman along is not mentioned anywhere. Moreover, it is clear from the facts that Stewart has been in the British Army, knows Dari as well as local politics thoroughly, has been involved with the Kennedy School of Government and finally his later appointment as governor in the occupying government in Iraq, that it is highly likely that he is a spy of some sort. Given this fact, the fact that Stewart was allowed to undertake his trip at all is quite remarkable, and it does seem some strings were pulled to make it possible. Of course, he himself says nothing about this. The result in any case is an insightful and highly readable book that will appeal to anyone interested in Afghanistan.
Rating :    
More
reviews...
|
 |
Turkey (Country Guide)
Price : $25.99 $16.24
Features
: - ISBN13: 9781741049275
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Average
Customer Rating : Not
yet rated |
|
Editorial Review :
Lonely Planet knows Turkey: paraglide over the velvety Mediterranean, haggle good-naturedly in the bazaars or enjoy the views from Mt Ararat, just like Noah and his animals - our 11th edition helps you experience Turkey's best.
Lonely Planet guides are written by experts who get to the heart of every destination they visit. This fully updated edition is packed with accurate, practical and honest advice, designed to give you the information you need to make the most of your trip.
In This Guide:
Inspiring itineraries to help plan your trip Unique cultural insights from a Cappadocian horse whisperer and a female Kurdish entrepreneur Essential information on crossing into Turkey's neighboring countries
Customer Review :
No review yet |
 |
Jerusalem and the Holy Land (Eyewitness Travel Guides)
Price : $25.00 $14.49
Features
: - ISBN13: 9780756628772
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Average
Customer Rating :      |
|
Customer Review :
Jerusalem and the Holy Land
A great travel guide full of beautiful pictures. The most informative I have found for the Holy Land. Includes great details about Petra.
Rating :     
Planning a trip
As other similar books from this collection, this one helps me a lot to plan and to get more from my trips abroad.
Rating :    
Interesting book
A must read for those who are interested in learning about Jerusalem and Israel in general.
Rating :     
Jerusalem and the Holy Land..Eyewitness Travel Guide
Just the ticket for our upcoming trip to the Holy Lands. Great photography and detailed descriptions of major cities/regions/attractions that we are looking forward to seeing in person. Well worth our investment.
Rating :     
Good Job for the Holy Land
"Jerusalem" and the Holy Land" was a great help to me while on my recent Sabbatical. It was small enough to carry and yet informative enough to be worth carrying. However, since I was visiting 5 countries, I made a habit of leaving each guide book to lighten my load as I was picking up other items along the way. I bought this one to replace the original and couldn't have been happier to receive it on time and in great condition. It helped me remember places and stories and, more importantly, label my photos.
Rating :     
More
reviews...
|
|
More
Results : 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 [Next] [Last]
|
|
|
|
|