Note: Frankly, I don't know where to put this topic in... Mods, move this topic to your own likings but if you plan to, please let me know where you put in. Thanks!
I haven't read this book yet but my girlfriend, Nas did. She cried several times when she read this book (she also laughed at Riverbend's humors in this book). She kept told me, "You must read this book. You must." The book just released few days ago and Nas found it at Barnes & Nobles where I got this book: Home-Alone America from.
Anyway, based on Nas's words, I strongly recommend anyone to pick this book up and read. The title is: Baghdad Burning: Girl Blog from Iraq wrote, or rather, blogged by Riverbend (fake name to protect herself), a Iraqi woman who saw all of these craps in Iraq which 'Corporate' or mainstreamed news didn't or refuse to cover.
Here's a customer review:
Once I am finish with this 'Fat Land' book, this book will be next on my list to read. Oh yeah, you can read her blog at: Riverbend - Baghdad Burning, I just found her blog few minutes ago with Nas's help. Enjoy.
I haven't read this book yet but my girlfriend, Nas did. She cried several times when she read this book (she also laughed at Riverbend's humors in this book). She kept told me, "You must read this book. You must." The book just released few days ago and Nas found it at Barnes & Nobles where I got this book: Home-Alone America from.
Anyway, based on Nas's words, I strongly recommend anyone to pick this book up and read. The title is: Baghdad Burning: Girl Blog from Iraq wrote, or rather, blogged by Riverbend (fake name to protect herself), a Iraqi woman who saw all of these craps in Iraq which 'Corporate' or mainstreamed news didn't or refuse to cover.
Here's a customer review:
First, this book is NOT written by James Ridgeway. He just wrote a short introduction to the book. Amazon should change its copy to reflect that Riverbend is the author of this collection of blog entries.
Riverbend is a woman in her mid-twenties living in the hell that is Baghdad. Her blog "Baghdad Burning" is an example of how vital the blogging phenomenon can be. She gives us, in "real time", a deeply intimate view of what is actually happening to the people of Iraq by describing what she and her family members are going through.
Her entries are sometimes funny, often angry, always compassionate. She is well educated and well read, knows a great deal about American culture and is ferociously honest.
Her entries are not ideological, like those of many other Iraqi bloggers. She speaks from her heart, not her politics.
Writing is writing, but great writing is rare and deserves to be honored. We are not a time, yet, when the literature of the Internet can be respected as equal to that in print. But, if there ever is a Nobel Prize for Internet Literature, Riverbend should be its first recipient. She is the equal to any essayist writing today. Even when angry, she writes with a delicacy, with true elegance that no other writer I know can match.
Each day, thousands of people around the world view her blog. Many days we are disappointed she has not made an entry. That is not because we love her writing and have learned so much from her expression of her point of view; we all open her page just to make sure she is still alive, that she has not been shot or bombed, or raped or subjected to any more suffering than she and her family have already experienced. She is a person many of us love deeply and want so much for her to survive and flourish.
I keep this book next to my computer. I pick it up occassionally and open it some random page. I learn from her, laugh with her, feel her agony at what has been done to her country, her people. This book is wonderful. It will become a classic. And it will stand as part of a body of great literature all of us who consider her a friend know she will someday write.
Once I am finish with this 'Fat Land' book, this book will be next on my list to read. Oh yeah, you can read her blog at: Riverbend - Baghdad Burning, I just found her blog few minutes ago with Nas's help. Enjoy.