Come Back to Afghanistan

A California Teenager's Story

By Said Hyder Akbar; Susan Burton
(Bloomsbury USA, Hardcover, 9781582345208, 320pp.)

Publication Date: October 13, 2005

Other Editions of This Title: Paperback (October 31, 2006)

Categories: Asia - Central, Asia - General, Travelers

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Description

The intimate and riveting chronicle of an extraordinarily courageous Afghan-American teenager coming of age in post-9/11 Afghanistan.

 

Building on two acclaimed radio documentaries aired on This American Life, Hyder Akbar tells how his ordinary suburban California life was turned upside-down after 9/11. Hyder’s father, a scion of an Afghan political family, sold his business—a hip-hop clothing store in Oakland—and left for Afghanistan, where he became President Hamid Karzai’s chief spokesman and later, the governor of Kunar, a rural province. Obsessed since youth with a country he had never even visited, seventeen-year-old Hyder convinced his father to let him join him on three successive summers. Working alongside his father at the presidential palace and in Kunar has given Hyder a rare front-row seat at the creation of democratic government in Afghanistan. In Come Back to Afghanistan, Hyder interweaves his personal journey—a teenager struggling with his identity in his parents’ homeland—with a dramatic behind-the-scenes account of political and civilian life in post-Taliban Afghanistan. Uncommonly wise and insightful, Hyder travels from palaces to prisons and from Kabul to the borderlands, revealing Afghanistan as readers have never seen or understood it before.




About the Author

Said Hyder Akbar is currently a college student. He is also the co-director and founder of his own non-governmental organization, Wadan Afghanistan, which has rebuilt schools and constructed pipe systems in rural Kunar province. He is now twenty.


Susan Burton
is a contributing editor of This American Life, and a former editor at Harper’s.  Her writing appears in the New York Times Magazine.




Praise For Come Back to Afghanistan

"Straddling cultures, Akbar presents an intimate portrait of a nation at a crossroads."--Conde Nast Traveler

"Refreshingly candid, Akbar worries about Afghanistan's poverty but remains hopeful."--GQ

“An exceedingly, commendably unique eyewitness account of a country in transition, told by a charming young narrator.”—Publishers Weekly

“By turns funny, insightful and, occasionally, breathtaking.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Engrossing...balances sophisticated political and social observations, astonishing for someone so young, with irresistible flashes of teen enthusiasm.”—Booklist



"Straddling cultures, Akbar presents an intimate portrait of a nation at a crossroads."

"Refreshingly candid, Akbar worries about Afghanistan''s poverty but remains hopeful."

"An exceedingly, commendably unique eyewitness account of a country in transition, told by a charming young narrator."

"By turns funny, insightful and, occasionally, breathtaking."

"Engrossing...balances sophisticated political and social observations, astonishing for someone so young, with irresistible flashes of teen enthusiasm."

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