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Titre : | The Taliban Shuffle: Strange Days in Afghanistan and Pakistan |
Auteurs : | Kim Barker |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : Random House of Canada, 2011 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-385-53331-7 |
Index. décimale : | 958.1 (Afghanistan) |
Résumé : |
"FromWar correspondent Barker first started reporting from Afghanistan in 2003, when the war there was lazy and insignificant. She was just learning to navigate Afghan culture, one caught between warring factions, and struggling to get space in her newspaper, the Chicago Tribune. Lulled into complacency, everyone from the U.S. military to the Afghan diplomatic corps to the Pakistani government stumbled as the Taliban regrouped. Very frank and honest, Barker admits a host of mistakes, including gross cultural ignorance that often put her in danger even as she found Afghanistan similar in some ways to Montana, her home state, what with ´┐¢bearded men in pickup trucks stocked with guns and hate for the government.´┐¢ She reports a string of characters: an amorous Pakistani former prime minister, a flashy Afghan American diplomat, an assortment of warlords, drug lords, fundamentalists, politicians, and fellow correspondents struck by wanderlust and plagued by messy personal lives´┐¢all of them against a backdrop of declining war coverage in declining American newspapers. A personal, insightful look at covering an ambivalent war in a complicated region. --Vanessa Bush ReviewPraise for The Taliban Shuffle ÔÇ£WhatÔÇÖs remarkable about┬á_The Taliban Shuffle_┬áis that its author, Kim Barker, has written an account of her experiences covering Afghanistan and Pakistan that manages to be hilarious and harrowing, witty and illuminating, all at the same timeÔǪ Ms. Barker has discovered a voice in these pages that enables her to capture both the serious and the seriously absurd conditions in Af-Pak (Afghanistan and Pakistan), and the surreal deal of being a female reporter there, with dating problems ranging from the screwball (a boyfriend competing to cover the same story) to the ridiculous (being romantically pursued by the former prime minister of Pakistan). Black humor, it turns out, is a perfect tool for capturing the sad-awful-frequently-insane incongruities of war.┬á The Taliban Shuffle, in fact, reads like a rollicking and revealing mashup of Imperial Life in the Emerald City (Rajiv ChandrasekaranÔÇÖs devastating 2006 portrait of the unreal world of IraqÔÇÖs Green Zone), War Reporting for Cowards (Chris AyresÔÇÖs entertaining 2005 account of being a newbie war reporter for The Times of London) and Robert AltmanÔÇÖs darkly satiric 1970 movie MASH, with a bit of Evelyn Waugh-esque satiric verve thrown in for good measure.ÔÇØ ┬á┬á┬á┬á ÔÇöMichiko Kakutani, _The New York Times ÔÇ£The Taliban Shuffle_ is part war memoir, part tale of self-discovery that, thanks to Barker's biting honesty and wry wit, manages to be both hilarious and heartbreaking.ÔÇØ ┬á┬á┬á┬áÔÇöThe Chicago Tribune ""Brilliant, tender, and unexpectedly hilarious."" _┬á┬á┬á┬áÔÇöMarie Claire ┬á┬á┬á┬áÔÇö_The Boston Globe ""Reporter Kim Barker immersed herself in Afghanistan and Pakistan for nine years and returned with stories that poignantly reflect her deep love for both countriesÔÇöand important insights into what went wrong. With dark, self-deprecating humor and shrewd insight, Barker chronicles her experiences as a rookie foreign reporter and the critical years in which the Taliban resurged amidst the collapse of the Afghan and Pakistani governments."" ┬á┬á┬á┬á ÔÇöThe Daily Beast ""Kim Barker's memoir about her five years covering Afghanistan and Pakistan for the Chicago Tribune is brave, funny and outrageous...._The Taliban Shuffle_ will pull you in so deep that youÔÇÖll smell the poppies and quake from the bombs."" ┬á┬á┬á┬á ÔÇöPeter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden┬áand The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda ┬á┬á┬á┬á ÔÇöJ. Maarten Troost, author of The Sex Lives of Cannibals |