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The Bookseller of Kabul
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Our November, 2006 book, "The Bookseller of Kabul"
by Asne Seierstad.
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From the Publisher With The Bookseller of Kabul,
award-winning journalist Asne Seierstad has given readers a first-hand look at Afghani life as few outsiders have seen it.
Invited to live with Sultan Khan, a bookseller in Kabul, and his family for months, this account of her experience allows
the Khans to speak for themselves, giving us a genuinely gripping and moving portrait of a family, and of a country of great
cultural riches and extreme contradictions.
For more than 20 years, Sultan Khan has defied the authorities—whether Communist or Taliban—to supply books
to the people of Kabul. He has been arrested, interrogated, and imprisoned, and has watched illiterate Taliban soldiers burn
piles of his books in the street. Yet he had persisted in his passion for books, shedding light in one of the world's darkest
places.
This is the intimate portrait of a man of principle and of his family—two wives, five children, and many relatives
sharing a small four-room house in this war ravaged city. But more than that, it is a rare look at contemporary life under
Islam, where even after the Taliban's collapse, the women must submit to arranged marriages, polygamous husbands, and crippling
limitations on their ability to travel, learn and communicate with others.
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