Confessions of a Mullah Warrior, Masood Farivar
Confessions of a Mullah Warrior, Masood Farivar
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Confessions of a Mullah Warrior

Author: Masood Farivar

Narrator: Christopher Lane

Unabridged: 9 hr 45 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)

Published: 03/01/2009


Synopsis

“If you liked The Kite Runner, you must read this riveting, firsthand account by one of the real Afghan mujahideen . . . An extraordinary tale.” —Leslie Cockburn Masood Farivar was ten years old when his childhood in peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan was shattered by the Soviet invasion of 1979. Although he was born into a long line of religious and political leaders who had shaped his nation’s history for centuries, Farivar fled to Pakistan with his family and came of age in a madrassa for refugees. At eighteen, he defied his parents and returned home to join the jihad, fighting beside not only the Afghan mujahideen but also Arab and Pakistani volunteers. When the Soviets withdrew, Farivar moved to America and attended the prestigious Lawrenceville School and Harvard, and ultimately became a journalist in New York. Farivar draws on his unique experience as a native Afghan, a former mujahideen fighter, and a longtime US resident to provide unprecedented insight into the ongoing collision between Islam and the West. This is a visceral, clear-eyed, and illuminating memoir from an indispensable new voice on the world stage. “Like the war poets who told you what it was really like to be in the trenches, Farivar survived to tell us about life on the front lines of the clash of civilizations—and it rings with more truth than any other account of these famous events I’ve ever read. In these troubled times, this is a book that is brave, honest, humane, and full of love.” —Aidan Hartley, author of The Zanzibar Chest

About Masood Farivar

Born in 1969 in Sheberghan, Afghanistan, Masood Farivar fought in the anti-Soviet resistance in the late 1980s before attending Harvard University, from which he received a degree in history and politics. His journalism has appeared in publications including The Wall Street Journal, The Village Voice, and Soldier of Fortune. He lives in Afghanistan.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Andrea on November 12, 2009

It gives you a great history of Afghanistan and how the country has evolved to today. There is not much of a personal or human position and little emotion. The book is from a strong muslim perspective which is different from my point of view and worth trying to understand. I don't think it's well wr......more

Goodreads review by Raja on July 10, 2010

An interesting story of courage, jihadist ambitions (temporary), greedy tribal factions, costly interventions by the Soviet and NATO, a personal internal conflict between comfort of the West and the raw beauty of an ancestral homeland, Afghanistan.......more

Goodreads review by D WEIKERT on December 12, 2018

Very interesting. Many things I didn't know about the Muslim religion and life in Afghanistan.......more

Goodreads review by Sheehan on March 01, 2011

While Farivar did participate in the tail end of the fight to remove the Soviets from Afghanistan, the title may be a marketable misnomer, as the greater majority of the book is really a personal history of navigating the chaotic world that is Afghanistan from the 1980's through 2008. The book is an......more

Goodreads review by Lucas on March 20, 2010

The title is even more sensationalist than 'Kill Bin Laden' but that was much more fitting than this. The author is too young for most of the anti-Soviet jihad, seeing only a few years of fighting at the very end, and after the withdrawal leaves Afghanistan to go to school in the U.S. where he stays......more