Afghanistan: A Collection of Stories
Book Details
Author(s)Abdul Rahman Rahmani
PublisherOutskirts Press, Inc.
ISBN / ASINB00EQ8FE08
ISBN-13978B00EQ8FE04
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
You can count on Abdul Rahman Rahmani to tell you what you really need to know about civilian life in the recent history of war torn Afghanistan.
From the rivers to the valleys of the Hindu Kush, from the treatment of women to the harsh rule of the Taliban, Rahmani has captured an insider’s perspective. With this book, you’ll trace personal experiences from inside an Afghan home to the terror experienced when the first rockets fell on a mountain village from Russian bomber planes.
Rahmani’s sharp eye has been able to capture candid and sometimes raw accounts of daily life that will help you understand what has been happening in the remote valleys to accounts of a coming of age story in busy Kabul, the country’s cultural and educational center.
This book has been edited by Gary Gray, an English instructor with the Afghan Air Force, the thirteen short stories chronicle disillusionment with local leaders, the misuse of power and the marginalization of uneducated Afghans.
Accounts of living in remote places present a perspective of what daily life has been like and the interconnectedness of family and interpersonal relationships.
You can count on Rahmani Abdulrahman to tell you what you really need to know about civilian life in the recent history of war torn Afghanistan.
From the rivers to the valleys of the Hindu Kush, from the treatment of women to the harsh rule of the Taliban, Rahmani has captured an insider’s perspective. With this book, you’ll trace personal experiences from inside an Afghan home to the terror experienced when the first rockets fell on a mountain village from Russian bomber planes.
Rahmani’s sharp eye has been able to capture candid and sometimes raw accounts of daily life that will help you understand what has been happening in the remote valleys to accounts of a coming of age story in busy Kabul, the country’s cultural and educational center.
This book has been edited by Gary Gray, an English instructor with the Afghan Air Force, the thirteen short stories chronicle disillusionment with local leaders, the misuse of power and the marginalization of uneducated Afghans.
Accounts of living in remote places present a perspective of what daily life has been like and the interconnectedness of family and interpersonal relationships.
From the rivers to the valleys of the Hindu Kush, from the treatment of women to the harsh rule of the Taliban, Rahmani has captured an insider’s perspective. With this book, you’ll trace personal experiences from inside an Afghan home to the terror experienced when the first rockets fell on a mountain village from Russian bomber planes.
Rahmani’s sharp eye has been able to capture candid and sometimes raw accounts of daily life that will help you understand what has been happening in the remote valleys to accounts of a coming of age story in busy Kabul, the country’s cultural and educational center.
This book has been edited by Gary Gray, an English instructor with the Afghan Air Force, the thirteen short stories chronicle disillusionment with local leaders, the misuse of power and the marginalization of uneducated Afghans.
Accounts of living in remote places present a perspective of what daily life has been like and the interconnectedness of family and interpersonal relationships.
You can count on Rahmani Abdulrahman to tell you what you really need to know about civilian life in the recent history of war torn Afghanistan.
From the rivers to the valleys of the Hindu Kush, from the treatment of women to the harsh rule of the Taliban, Rahmani has captured an insider’s perspective. With this book, you’ll trace personal experiences from inside an Afghan home to the terror experienced when the first rockets fell on a mountain village from Russian bomber planes.
Rahmani’s sharp eye has been able to capture candid and sometimes raw accounts of daily life that will help you understand what has been happening in the remote valleys to accounts of a coming of age story in busy Kabul, the country’s cultural and educational center.
This book has been edited by Gary Gray, an English instructor with the Afghan Air Force, the thirteen short stories chronicle disillusionment with local leaders, the misuse of power and the marginalization of uneducated Afghans.
Accounts of living in remote places present a perspective of what daily life has been like and the interconnectedness of family and interpersonal relationships.
