Zaatar Days, Henna Nights: Adventures, Dreams, and Destinations Across the Middle East
by Maliha Masoodbook data
32 ratings, 3.31 average rating, 11 reviews
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published
December 29th 2006
by Seal Press
binding
Paperback, 320 pages
isbn
1580051928
(isbn13: 9781580051927)
description
When twenty-eight-year-old Maliha Masood, a burned-out dot-commer from Seattle, bought a one-way ticket to adventure and rejuvenation, she found it in...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 44)
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
all
Full of "noor" (or light in Arabic)- a beautiful antidote to current and rising bigotries. Reading this entertaining travel/memoir is a great way to dispel stereotypes you might have about Syria, Egypt, Turkey and Jordan, especially of the male gender in those cultures.
The author, Middle Eastern by descent, lives in Seattle and traveled through the Mideast to discover her roots. A few of her adventures are hair-raising as she travels alone,(mostly the fault of people misinterpreting...more
The author, Middle Eastern by descent, lives in Seattle and traveled through the Mideast to discover her roots. A few of her adventures are hair-raising as she travels alone,(mostly the fault of people misinterpreting...more
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bookshelves:
gave-up-on,
travel
Read in January, 2008
I wish there were more books like Patricia Storace's _Dinner With Persephone_....a travel book that tells the story of the people she lived among for a year. This book looks like it may fit the bill. Just started reading it, so I hope so!
Update: disappointing. I finally gave up and returned it to the library. It seems like the book was about how the author could interest men all over the globe and make them wish she'd stay with them forever when she moved on to the next place of interest...more
Update: disappointing. I finally gave up and returned it to the library. It seems like the book was about how the author could interest men all over the globe and make them wish she'd stay with them forever when she moved on to the next place of interest...more
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"If I had chickened out and waited any longer, I might have given my parents fewer headaches, definitely fewer worries, but I probably wouldn't have forgiven myself for failing to disengage from a rusty vessel of thwarted hopes before it foundered and sank. As least that was how I saw my life six years ago."
For anyone that dreams of traveling to "find themselves", this is an entertaining and honest account of one woman's travels in the Middle East. There is something to be ...more
For anyone that dreams of traveling to "find themselves", this is an entertaining and honest account of one woman's travels in the Middle East. There is something to be ...more
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It's just a travel diary with some weird lapses in chronology but it's very interesting because she's an American raised, Pakistan born woman who backpacks through the Middle East. Just getting glimpses of day-to-day life in Beirut and Amman makes it worth the read. When she waxes philosophical about "identity" it gets very weak but the various times she is detained (and accused of being a terrorist) are telling.
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Read in October, 2008
I enjoyed this just because it took me back to places I've been and experiences I've had. At times, I tended to wonder how much was fact ...however, I really liked her descriptions of how she was neither "fish nor fowl" in trying to juggle the two parts of who she really was.
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bookshelves:
non-fiction,
travel
Read in November, 2007
B- While the idea of her trip (traveling for extended periods of time) is incredibly appealing, at times, you feel like she is a snob. Her adventures are interesting--she trusts everyone--but sometimes, you feel like she thinks she's above it all.
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
armchair travelers
This was a great read. The few episodes of self-conscious navel-gazing are outshone by wonderful travel stories. A great read about places we hear little of.
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bookshelves:
own
Read in April, 2007
Loved it. Great cultural commentary, a beautiful style of travel writing, and very cool firsthand observations of a world that often seems veiled to the West.
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didn-t-finish
Read in May, 2008
Disappointingly egocentric. And boring, which I thought would be impossible given the premise.
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Read in December, 2007
I dare anyone to find me one sentence in this book that wasn't a simile or painfully ego-centric.
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I enjoyed reading this book all the way through it very much!! yay!!
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currently-reading (on 6 people's shelves)
travel (on 2 people's shelves)
non-fiction (on 2 people's shelves)
didn-t-finish (on 1 person's shelf)
the-orient (on 1 person's shelf)
own (on 1 person's shelf)
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