Ghaith Abdul-Ahad was born in Iraq in 1975. He began writing for the Guardian and the Washington Post after the US-led invasion in 2003 and has reported across Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen and Afghanistan for the past twenty years. Putting the experiences of civilians at the heart of his writing, he has won numerous awards including the British Press Awards' Foreign Reporter of the Year, the Orwell Prize for Journalism and two Emmys. He currently lives in Istanbul.
An excellent and haunting account of the impact of western policies
premised on sectarianism that engulfed the country after 2003
*Financial Times*
A bracing read, punctuated by accounts of violence, torture and
extortion
*The Guardian*
This book shatters western assumptions, shows the effect on Iraqis
of cycles of violence - and offers cautious hope . . . A Stranger
in Your Own City reminds us is that sectarianism was imposed on
many Iraqis post-invasion by new rulers who . . . needed a
political system based on sectarianism. This isn't just a book
about war. The epilogue shows it's also about the generation who
saw the folly in the invasion's design and rose up. At some point,
change is inevitable.
*The Observer*
A Stranger in Your Own City is a stunning piece of emotional and
psychological topography, charting the many clashing lives of pre-
and post-invasion Iraq. Unlike a parade of books that focused
predominantly on the Westerners who helped unleash so much of the
country's carnage, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad centers the people who call
Iraq home. Through visceral, sometimes first-hand accounts, he
tells the stories of both victims and perpetrators, never
retreating into artificial neutrality. This is a vital archive of a
time and place in history that, in the post-9/11 age, so many would
rather forget, a book that's at once difficult to read and
impossible to put down
*Omar El Akkad, author of WHAT STRANGE PARADISE*
A crucial and important new voice, as brilliant, passionate and
fearless as he is well-informed, skeptical and nuanced. But Ghaith
Abdul-Ahad is also a writer of exquisite prose, whose thoughtful,
moving and often disturbing work elevates war reportage and the
memoir of conflict and loss to levels rarely seen since Michael
Herr's Dispatches or James Fenton's All the Wrong Places. A
Stranger in Your Own City is that rarity: a genuine melancholy
masterpiece'
*William Dalrymple, author of RETURN OF A KING*
In this searing and clear-eyed account of Iraq's last two decades
of conflict Abdul-Ahad expresses the broken-heartedness of a man
who loses his country over and again to sectarianism and bloodshed.
Abdul-Ahad writes with bitter humour and an unsentimental style,
using a cast of characters - militiamen, teachers, torturers and
doctors - to illuminate actions that seem almost impossible to
understand; his reporting on Iraq strips away any myths and refuses
to romanticise or glorify anyone or anything. It is a powerful,
unforgettable book
*Nadifa Mohamed, author of THE FORTUNE MEN*
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad is a journalistic marvel and a terrible joy as a
writer, never wearying of the world as he maps its cruelties. He's
eloquent and compassionate, vulnerable, scathing and funny when he
sketches his personal life as an Iraqi among the American and
European press pack, almost unbearably clear when he brings us
close to the irredeemable personal injustices of war. Many have
crossed over from non-western upbringing into English language
reporting, but Abdul-Ahad manages to transcend that binary - he's
resolutely of both and neither. It's as if you're watching a live
western TV news segment from Iraq, Syria or Yemen, and from out of
the crowd of anonymous locals behind the correspondent, a man steps
forward, moves the reporter gently aside, and starts to speak into
the camera - a reporter too, and better at it than the one he
displaced, but never renouncing his old place in the world of the
reported on
*James Meek, author of TO CALAIS, IN ORDINARY TIME*
In A Stranger in Your Own City, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad is the rarest of
documentarians. Having grown up in Baghdad before the American
invasion, and then having worked for the foreign press, Abdul-Ahad
is a stranger in the best sense of the term - a man between
regimes, between languages, between even forms of expression. His
beautiful line drawings are just as expressive as his trenchant
prose. This book reminds us of the human costs of a war that most
Americans have chosen to forget
*Peter Hessler, author of THE BURIED: AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE
EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION*
A sobering, blistering frontline account of internecine warfare in
a region crying for peace
*Kirkus Reviews*
Kaleidoscopic and incisive . . . Abdul-Ahad details bloody
sectarian battles, heart-pounding run-ins with ISIS henchmen, and a
populace trying to reclaim its city and country from Iraq's greedy
ruling class and those still 'immersed in their selfish sectarian
mentalities.' It's a master class in reporting
*Publishers Weekly*
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