Infidel

by Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Infidel  
published April 1st 2008 by Free Press
first published 2007
binding Paperback
isbn 0743289692   (isbn13: 9780743289696)
pages 368
description In this profoundly affecting memoir from the internationally renowned author of The Caged Virgin, Ayaan Hirsi Ali tells her astonishing life st...more
date added
10-17-07



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Milan/zzz
If I ever decide to make a list of the most important books I’ve read “Infidel” by Ayaan Hirsi Ali would surely find its place on it.

First time I’ve heard about Miss Hirsi Ali it was after murder of Theo Van Gogh because of his film “Submission-part one” which he made in collaboration with Hirsi Ali. Theo has been shoot and slaughtered in the middle of the day and the letter for Hirsi Ali (in which assassin is promising the same to her) was staked with knife in Theo’s chest. It w...more
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Peggy
03/20/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: biography, Africa, Saudia Arabia, Islam. War, religious freedom, Womens rights
oh gosh.. only 30 pages into this book and I'm not sure I can read it..
Female castration/ mutilation - this isn't in the dark ages.. this happens in mid 1970 and still happens today!!

This is an incredible biography of a girl who was born in a country torn apart by war, in a continent mostly known for what goes wrong rather than right. Measured by the standards of Somalia and Africa she states she is privileged to be alive and thriving.
She states; "Where I grew up, death is a const...more
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andreas
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for: everyone, really
"Infidel" is the personal story of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali woman who, after a loveless childhood (to put it very mildly), came to Holland at the age of 20 claiming refugee status to escape an arranged and forced marriage, and to assert her independence. She was accepted, found her way around, studied political science, became a citizen, fell away from Islam, and became a member of Parliament. In 2004 she and Theo van Gogh made the short film "Submission Part 1", which resul...more
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Kellie
07/23/08

bookshelves: 2008-reads
This book is about the life of Ayaan. It begins in Somalia where Ayaan is born. She is brought up in a Muslim family. Her mother wants to lead a very strict Muslim life, her father is a bit more relaxed but still obeys the Muslim rule.

Her father is a member of a political movement that is working against the president of Somalia, Siad Barre. As a result, the family had to move around a lot to be safe. First Saudi Arabia, where they were exposed to the very strict rules of Islam. Woman were ...more
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gatheringwater
bookshelves: biography
Read in August, 2008
Ayann Hirsi Ali appears to value truth and individual liberty above all else. A belief in these values led her out of a childhood of shocking brutality made possible by tribal and religious authority. It gave her the courage to take the chance given her to flee from an arranged marriage and to make a new life for herself in the Netherlands. Many people, it seems, would be much happier if her story stopped there.

An insistence on the value of truth and liberty kept Ali questioning in her new h...more
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Meika
05/03/08

recommended to Meika by: Ellie
The first half of this book is a littany of horrors. It's muddy and difficult prose, detailing the thousand daily struggles of a girl in Third World Africa. She begs you not to hate the people who inflicted hurt on her and on others, but there's no way for someone not from that world to even comprehend. At one point she talks about living in Kenya, and recalls seeing a youth running from a crowd of people who are calling him a thief, and how they catch him and stone him and beat him, probably...more
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Peggy Sue
Read in June, 2007
This book is a must read for all people trying to understand the Muslim attitude and outlook. Hirsi Asaan Ali is a courageous woman who has given us a peek into her mind on what a Muslim thinks. I quote so you can see how powerful she is.

"We Muslims had been taught to define life on earth as a passage, a test that precedes real life in the Hereafter. In that test, everyone should ideally live in a manner resembling, as closely as possible, the followers of the Prophet. Didn’t this...more
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Gwenevere
Read in March, 2008
Synopsis
The author tells her account of how she became an Infidel in the eyes of Islam. She was raised Muslim and after an abusive childhood and adolescence she began to question her faith. She ran away from an arranged marriage and was granted refugee status in Holland. While there further questioning and more education eventually caused her to turn away from Islam and God.

Review
Although this book was quite intriguing I can only give it 2 ½ stars (at best 3). A book must be much more t...more
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Anna
06/24/08

Read in June, 2008
recommended to Anna by: John
I couldn't put this book down. Quite literally. My big brother John recommended it to me late last week. I bought it Saturday. It was done by midnight on Monday. Mind you, I'm teaching summer school this summer, and also finishing my Masters degree. What's more: I even got a little bit of sleep while devouring this book.

There's something tremendously alluring about Ali's voice. She is a strong, determined, tenacious narrator. You feel a sense of intimacy with her from the earliest pa...more
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Leonora of
Read in August, 2007

I, probably like most Americans, had never heard of Ayaan Hirsi Ali before ordering this book because I had heard great things about it. She has been compared to Salman Rushdie, only because of the price on her head.

The book begins, perfectly in this regard, with the death of Theo van Gogh. Some people might remember the book "Murder in Amsterdam" which was about his 'assassination'. He was killed because of a movie he and Ayaan Hirsi Ali made together called "Submission&quo...more
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Amanda R
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: everyone
I feel like my imagination isn't big enough to even begin to comprehend what life is like growing up in Somalia, Kenya, and Saudi Arabia - as a female Muslim with an absent father and an abusive mother. Even though Ayaan does a good job covering her youth and describing her life to those who have no frame of reference for that kind of life, it still is hard to imagine. It goes without saying that those of us born and raised in the United States have been so amply blessed; its almost beyond com...more
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Laura
04/28/08

Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: feminists, atheists, mothers, people interested in international politics, Africa, Islamic criticism
I learned so much from reading this book. Aayan Hirsi Ali has led an astonishing life characterized by cruelty and oppression, and yet throughout her life has somehow preserved a sense of hope, love of mankind, and a deep perception of real justice. I found her premise about the reason for the rise of terrorist groups very compelling. Hirsi Ali argues that because governments based on Islamic Law (Sharia) cannot be criticized (because if Allah requires it, it cannot be questioned), when gover...more
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Telly
08/28/07

Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: thos who enjoy autobiographies.
This book is masquerades as pure autobiography of the daughter of an iconic Somali revolutionary, who was absent for most of her life and left her, her brother, and her sister to be cared for by a heavy handed grandmother and an abusive mother. If I were rating the review as an autobiography, I would give it an additional star. As an autobiography, it does not let you down, although it does drag a little slower towards the end.

When reading this book, however, you quickly realize that there...more
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Kevin
08/23/07

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: Everyone should read this book!

Ayaan grew up in a strict Muslim Somalian family, but the world she thought of as being so normal, to me, seemed like some surreal nightmare alternate reality, or a circle of hell that women are condemned to. Growing up, she secretly reads old English novels, and Nancy Drew mysteries, all the while living an otherwise strict Islamic life, occasionally slipping up and enduring the horrors of female genital excision, near-death beatings from family members and teachers, and eventually the early ...more
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Chris
11/21/07

Read in November, 2007
Some of the reviews on GoodReads for Infidel have accused Ayaan Hirsi Ali of using the platform of autobiography to expound her political views and have suggested that any American reading this book may not pick up on a perceived subtlety of doing so (whereas, one suspects, in Holland this is quite obvious). My response to this is: of course she has. Any autobiography worth reading has to be more than a simple cataloging of life’s events; otherwise it would simply be a journal. Imagine read