Description
What will happen when international forces finally vacate Afghanistan? The answer to that question is unknown, but if there is any hope for Afghanistan, veteran journalist Peter Eichstaedt asserts, it is with its people.
After spending 2004 in Afghanistan working for the nonprofit Institute for War and Peace Reporting and helping build Afghanistan's first independent news agency, Eichstaedt returned to Kabul in 2010. As he worked with Afghan journalists to document their history and collective struggles, he realized that although Kabul itself appeared cleaned up, with freshly paved roads, the optimism of the newly liberated capital had faded under the rise of the Taliban insurgency. Eichstaedt subsequently crisscrossed the country to interview an astonishing array of Afghans. In Above the Din of War, he shares these conversations, including emotional and critical commentary and opinions from a former warlord, a Taliban judge, victims of self-immolation, poppy growers, courageous women parliamentarians, would-be suicide bombers, a besieged video store owner, frightened mullahs, and desperate archaeologists.
Providing a forum for the everyday people of Afghanistan to be heard, Eichstaedt reveals the truth behind the calculated rhetoric of war, politics, and diplomacy, and suggests a path forward toward a sustainable future for Afghanistan and southern Asia.
About the Author
Peter Eichstaedt is the Africa editor for the Institute of War and Peace Reporting in The Hague. He is a veteran journalist who has reported from locations worldwide, including Slovenia, Moldova, Afghanistan, Albania, Armenia, and Uganda, and a former senior editor for Uganda Radio Network. He is the author of If You Poison Us: Uranium and Native Americans.
Reviews
"Authentic voices of Afghanistan--ones the US news media have not brought you--come to life through Eichstaedt's capable reporting as compelling reading, vitally important for their future. And ours." --David Isby, author of Afghanistan: Graveyard of Empires
"Above the Din of War is a critical read for anyone looking to understand what's at stake and likely to happen as American forces leave Afghanistan in 2014." --Tom A. Peter, Afghanistan correspondent, The Christian Science Monitor
"These are vivid, mostly sympathetic portraits of Afghans who have weathered decades of chaos, and though a solution still seems far-off, Eichstaedt has done a great service by bringing their perspectives to the American public. . . . illuminating, timely, and necessary." -- Publishers Weekly
"A work of skilled and brutally honest journalism. Heartbreaking and spellbinding dispatches from a country descending into madness." -- Kirkus Reviews
Book Information
ISBN 9781613745151
Author Peter Eichstaedt
Format Hardback
Page Count 304
Imprint Chicago Review Press
Publisher Chicago Review Press
Weight(grams) 594g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 152mm * 25mm