Thursday, February 27, 2014

The Taliban Cricket Club

Before the Taliban came into power, Rukhsana attended university, played cricket, fell in love, and even became a journalist. But now she is just one of the faceless, voiceless single women of Kabul, unable to leave her home alone, condemned to invisibility under her burka, hoping to find a way out of Afghanistan for both herself and her younger brother, Jahan.
"A few meters of fabric, soft, fragile, and pliable, became our cell. No granite was was more impregnable, no bars more unbreakable, no dungeon darker or more dreadful. I vanished from sight, as if a magician had passed a wand over me. I was no longer Rukhsana with a distinctive nose, a mouth, eyes, a forehead, a chin, a head of hair, but a walking shroud, identical to every other shamed and shrouded woman in the street. Under the burka it was clear that this Afghanistan had no place for women."
 It looks hopeless...until the Taliban themselves unexpectedly offer a way out:  playing cricket. They want to show the world that sport is alive and well in Afghanistan by forming a state cricket team. If Rukhsana can teach her brother and her many male cousins how to play, she just might be able to get them all out of Afghanistan. But she only has 3 weeks in which to do it. And, as a woman, she's been forbidden to play. If she's caught, they could all be sent to prison. Or worse. To add to her difficulties, there is a hateful Taliban minister who wants to marry her....

Wow. I loved this book! Timeri N. Murari's writing is poetic and powerful. I held my breath with Rukhsana, and cringed in fear, and laughed and cried with her. I worried about her brother and her cousins. Murari even made me care about a cricket match. The Taliban Cricket Club is a remarkable story of one young woman's hope, strength, and defiance in the face of overwhelming cruelty and terror. It is a story of family loyalty. Most of all, it is a love story. One I won't soon forget.

Similar Reads:
     Kabul Girls Soccer Club by Awista Ayub
     The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
     The Sewing Circles of Herat by Christina Lamb

7 comments:

  1. Must be good if it can make a reader care about cricket! (Just kidding, cricket fans....) Thanks for writing this review. I am putting this on my list...near the top.

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    1. It was a nice surprise! I hope you enjoy reading it, too.

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  2. Sounds amazing! I can see myself loving this as well. I liked the quote about the burka being a cell--if that is a flavor of the prose, then I'm impressed.

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    1. I think that passage was really powerful too. Looks like a really good book...

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    2. This is one of those books that you carry with you even after you're done reading it. And yes, Jane, that is how this author writes. I had a hard time choosing one quote because there were so many amazing passages. I completely fell in love with his writing.

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  3. I have to say that I know nothing about cricket, but this sounds like a really wonderful story!

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    1. Luckily, the game of cricket gets explained in a very entertaining way...which is good, because I find the actual game of cricket kind of boring and really confusing.

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