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| Nine Parts of Desire: The Hidden World of Islamic Women | 
enlarge | Author: Geraldine Brooks Publisher: Penguin Category: Book
List Price: £8.99 Buy New: £3.71 You Save: £5.28 (59%)
New (15) from £3.71
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 10159
Media: Paperback Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0141029404 EAN: 9780141029405 ASIN: 0141029404
Publication Date: February 22, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW and IN STOCK - dispatched within 48 hours from the UK
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Fascinating insight into the lives of Islamic women. October 12, 2008 I live in Dubai, a progressive Islamic country and have also visited Saudi Arabia on several occasions while my husband worked there. I found this a fascinating book, putting into perspective a lot of the contradictory Islamic practices that I have observed in the two countries. The author has travelled extensively across Islamic countries and reached into the lives of many women from diverse origins and from as far afield as Africa and Turkey, through to the Middle East. Her easy manner has enabled women of many backgrounds to open up to her. The result is a very balanced view of Islam and the cultural practices that have become associated with the religion. It was this distinction between The Koran, the hadiths and culture that explained the very different behaviour of different groups.
This is certainly a book that I shall read again. My only complaint is that it is already 13 years since it was published and I would love to hear Ms Brooks views on the issues now. Does she feel that her prediction of the looming rise of Fundamenalism has been realised?
Well written and well worth a read June 14, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this on a whim after a trip to Egypt that left me confused about what I was seeing at home and abroad in regard to women in Islam. Easy to read and not at all 'dry' the text is written by a journalist who I feel has avoided simply reporting stereotypes (as one reviewer has alleged) while not shying away from any truth in assumptions those ignorant to Islam or the Middle East may have made. She talks to progressive Muslims as well as hard-liners and though perhaps it is clear she supports a more progressive view I think she represents both sides with care.
I found it a fascinating read and certainly something I would recommend in a time when fear and ignorance are prominent in the way people react to a religion they don't necessarily understand.
A Fascinating Read December 9, 2007 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Using her six-year experience in the Middle East, Geraldine Brooks wrote her first book entitled "Nine Parts of Desire," which was published in 1995. The author spent sex years researching the status and the role of women in several Middle East countries such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq. The book is broken into thirteen chapters, which describes the journey and the observation of the author in the Middle East countries. She writes about the history of Muhammad and his wives, the purpose for the veil and hijab, the Islamic marriages, the women in military, politics, business, and entertainment, and the author's experience with Queen Noor in Jordan.
In part, this book explores the women's social status as defined by the Islamic culture and the words of the prophet Muhammad. Since Muhammad's death, the Islamic culture has been defining women according to their Koran, which became part of Islamic law (p. 190). The Muslim traditions and customs, such as hidden faces, hairs, or exposed skin of women, seems to came from the book of Koran that expresses Muhammad's accounts with his wives and his revelations. The Islamic laws seem to require women to wear hijab, cloth covering all of their skin expect for hands and eyes, and restricted social interaction between men and women who are not related by blood. In this book, Brooks mentions that the prophet, Muhammad, had a revelation from Allah that required women to be put in seclusion and to wear hijab when in public to avoid the sight of men who might feel temptation or desire to them for their own (p. 4-5, 20-1, 83). The Koran's accounts of Muhammad and his wives seem to show examples of why women needed to be covered and how this gives men ideas of being pure-hearted.
Throughout this book, one can comprehend why the repression against women became intensified in the Islamic societies in the 1970s to the 1990s through the defined social status of women in Islamic culture, Muhammad's interpretation of women's status, the rise of the fundamentalism and its mission, and their reasons for repressing women. With her extensive experience interviewing Muslim women in the Middle East, Brooks has written a fascinating book which expresses an unique perspective about the lives and tradition of Muslim women of the Islamic culture.
Eye opening! June 10, 2007 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I started to read this book while staying with friends in Cairo. It really opened my eyes to so much of the truth and myth about women in Islam and also to what is or is not actually written in the Koran. Absolutely facinating and a must for anyone who wants to broaden their understanding of the world we live in.
Really Improved My Opinion of Ayatollah Khomeni and Iran April 12, 2004 28 out of 31 found this review helpful
I'm an American woman who has lived overseas in Morocco for twelve years. My friends and I are reading this book for our monthly bookclub selection. None of us was able to put the book down, once we started it. We all read the book in one or two days.The author is a journalist who spent considerable time in the Middle East, reporting from various countries. Although this is not a scholarly work, it is well-researched. The book focuses on her own personal experiences in each country, and ancecdotes from various women she met in each country. For me, the most interesting parts of the book discussed the home and personal life of the Ayatollah Khomeni. After reading this book, my opinion of both him, and of Islamic life in Iran, went up by about 300 percent. The author met and interviewed his wife, and various family members. He was a fairly modern, new-age husband, and playful father, who even got up in the middle of the night and gave his kids their bottles, and changed their diapers. The only thing he was quite strict about was the Islamic religion. Anyone who is interested in the lives of women in the Middle East should read this book. The book is as accurate today as it was when it was written.
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