My Forbidden Face: Growing Up Under the Taliban: A Young Woman's Story | Latifa | My Forbidden Face
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My Forbidden Face:...
My Forbidden Face: Growing Up Under the Taliban: A Young Woman's Story
Latifa
Miramax
, 2003 - 224 pages
average customer review:
based on 41 reviews
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highly recommended
Born into a middle-class Afghan family in Kabul in 1980, Latifa had a conventional childhood. Then,
Taliban
soldiers seized power in Kabul. And from that moment, Latifa, just sixteen, became a prisoner in her own home. The simplest and most basic freedoms were
forbidden
. She was forced to put on a chadri, the state-mandated uniform that covered her entire body. Disbelief at having to hide herself was soon replaced by fear, the fear of being whipped or stoned like women she'd seen. My Forbidden
Face
provides a moving and highly personal account of life
under
the Taliban regime. With painful honesty and clarity, Latifa describes her ordered world falling apart, in the name of a fanaticism that she could not comprehend, and replaced by a world where terror and oppression reign.
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My Forbidden Face : Growing Up Under the Taliban - A Young Woman's Story
My
Forbidden
Face
:
Growing
Up
Under
the
Taliban
- A
Young
Woman
's
Story
, is a firsthand account of a young girl under the Taliban. The Book begins as 16 year old Latifa, and ends when she is twenty one. I thought this book was very well written, and very enjoyable. I thought the book was kind of fluffy, meaning that, though it gave us information about the Taliban, and what it was like living under it, it was still not giving us a lot of detail. Sure, she talks about the rights they took away from women, and the depression it caused her and millions other women in the country, but I think she could have been a bit more focused on her life before the Taliban took over Afghanistan, as it is a biography.
I do recommend this book to people who are interested in Human Rights, women in the Middle East, but I think that people who have read other books about Women's rights issues wouldn't like this book as much as someone who has just begun to take an interest in the subjects.
I highy recommend The Princess Series, by Jean Sasson, and Nine Parts of Desire, by Geraldine Brooks.
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My Forbidden Face
This is a great little book which gives a personal, moving account of the years after the
Taliban
took over Afghanistan. I'd recommend it to anyone with a desire to know more about that part of the world.
Could have used a competent editor, but good effort
This book jumps around a lot. The author could have used a better editor. Since this book deals with a lot of historical aspects of
growing
up in Afghanistan, a linear format would have worked better than the back and forth the author uses. One day her brother's fighting the Soviets. Then he's married in another country, then he's fighting the Soviets. You get the idea. It's a little hard to keep track of who's doing what.
As to the descriptions of the author's life, however, it was pretty good, but I don't feel she adequately captured the horrors of what was going on, at least not compared to other books I've read on the subject. More detail and expansion would have been good.
However, the book was very good, especially from one so
young
. I do recommend it.
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When Home Becomes Prison
Home became prison for women when the
Taliban
arrived. And I don't think Taliban rule was a picnic for most men either. "Latifah" did a great job of describing the deep depression of women whose lives suddenly became worth nothing with no hope and no dreams allowed.
This book was mentioned in a reader review of the book "A Thousand Splendid Suns". A reviewer implied that that the author plagiarized "Latifah's" book. I was curious so I bought "My
Forbidden
Face
". I see no signs of any plagiarism at all. Can't imagine what the reviewer was thinking.
Another reviewer of "My Forbidden Face" wanted to know the reasoning behind the Taliban rules so that she could
under
stand better. The Taliban wanted to demoralize and subjugate the people for complete control. That was the reason behind every crazy pronouncement.
I have to agree that the editing was poor and the timelines confusing. I had to re-read some portions of the book because I thought I missed segments. Turns out I didn't miss anything--what I was looking for wasn't there.
Definitely worth reading for the
young
woman
's account of what life was like in Afghanistan during that time period. Scary and heartbreaking.
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