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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
March 13, 2018 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781684411658
- File size: 418320 KB
- Duration: 14:31:29
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
Narrator Susan Nezami moves listeners through images of the conflict in Syria that may have numbed us on the nightly news. She begins somberly with the unrest that grew in 2011, telling listeners in precise detail how the nation was turned upside down. Nezami is a strong narrator who recounts current events through the lives of four real-life people, used as main characters. Their presence anchors the listener as she describes the growing chaos of civil war. The trials and tribulations in the well-researched stories of Suleiman, Mohammad, and Abu Azzam serve as examples of the millions of people caught up in the struggle for power between the rebels and the regime. Nezami's gravitas resonates with the content, helping listeners make sense of this dense material. M.R. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
March 5, 2018
Foreign correspondent Abouzeid spins finely detailed and informed narratives of how life in Bashar al-Assad’s Syria descended into street protests and the bloody ongoing chaos of the “civilian revolution.” Abouzeid explores the revolt, primarily through the stories of young men who take on the regime, including Suleiman, a wealthy middle manager turned activist; Mohammad, a father imprisoned for suspected Islamist ties and subjected to grisly tortures; and the pseudonymous Abu Azzam, a literature student turned rebel fighter. She also conveys the plight of noncombatants, such as one young girl, Ruha, and her family, who escape to Turkey to become “business-class refugees,” out of immediate danger but enduring the hardships of a foreign country while trying to aid those in their hometown across the border. The author skillfully sets forth the complex political and military rivalries between those supporting and opposing the regime, discussing their backers from Saudi Arabia and Qatar as well as the foreign and homegrown fighters who became ISIS. In notes at the beginning and end, Abouzeid details her intense and perilous reporting process. She was banned from the country, she explains, soon after protests began, but nevertheless spent roughly three weeks a month clandestinely entering Syria for the next several years. Her grueling reportage is a formidable accomplishment.
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