The Taliban shuffle :strange days in Afghanistan and Pakistan
Material type: TextPublication details: New York Doubleday 2011Description: viii, 302p. mapISBN: 9780385533317Subject(s): Afghan War, 2001- | War correspondents | United States | Afghanistan | Pakistan | Press coverage | Women war correspondentsDDC classification: 958.1047 Summary: In this darkly comic and unsparing memoir that "tells us more about the Afghan debacle than any foreign policy briefing” (The Seattle Times), the famed investigative journalist uses her wry, incisive voice to expose the absurdities and tragedies of the “forgotten war,” finding humor and humanity amid the rubble and heartbreak. When Kim Barker first arrived in Kabul as a journalist in 2002, she barely owned a passport, spoke only English and had little idea how to do the “Taliban Shuffle” between Afghanistan and Pakistan. No matter—her stories about Islamic militants and shaky reconstruction were soon overshadowed by the bigger news in Iraq. But as she delved deeper into Pakistan and Afghanistan, her love for the countries grew, along with her fear for their future stability.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 958.1047 BAR/T (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 54160 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
958.1046 MAG/A Afghanistan : mullah, Marx, and mujahid | 958.1046 McG/M Manhattan to Baghdad: despatches from the frontline in the war on terrorism | 958.1046 ZAH/A An Afghan diary : Zahir Shah to Taliban | 958.1047 BAR/T The Taliban shuffle :strange days in Afghanistan and Pakistan | 958.1047 HIL/C Combat camera : from Auntie Beeb to the Afghan front line | 958.1047 JUN/W War | 958.1047 LAM/F Farewell Kabul : from Afghanistan to a more dangerous world |
In this darkly comic and unsparing memoir that "tells us more about the Afghan debacle than any foreign policy briefing” (The Seattle Times), the famed investigative journalist uses her wry, incisive voice to expose the absurdities and tragedies of the “forgotten war,” finding humor and humanity amid the rubble and heartbreak.
When Kim Barker first arrived in Kabul as a journalist in 2002, she barely owned a passport, spoke only English and had little idea how to do the “Taliban Shuffle” between Afghanistan and Pakistan. No matter—her stories about Islamic militants and shaky reconstruction were soon overshadowed by the bigger news in Iraq. But as she delved deeper into Pakistan and Afghanistan, her love for the countries grew, along with her fear for their future stability.
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