As an exploration of the social fabric of Afghan life, <b>this book takes some beating</b>. It's also a<b> deft history </b>of the country since the 1960s, charting its journey from hippy hang-out to Soviet satellite state, jihadist battleground, and finally, failed nation-building project
Daily Telegraph
Åsne Seierstad is <b>one of the greatest, most courageous journalists of our time</b>. While others were desperately fleeing Afghanistan, Seierstad traveled there alone to see the impact of the Taliban victory. This is <b>an important, heartbreaking book </b>about the limits of military power, religious fundamentalism, America's broken promises, and the profound betrayal of Afghan women
Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation
<i>The Afghans</i> is not simply an <b>addictively engrossing read</b>, but is<b> also a work of real importance</b> as we come to terms with Afghanistan's recent past and the return of the Taliban. This is a <b>deeply human</b> piece of writing which approaches the war through the eyes of the Afghans, men and women, who lived it, who made impossible choices at difficult moments, and who continue to live with the consequences. <b>Harrowing, uplifting, fascinating, challenging and profound, no other recent book on the subject comes close</b>
CPW Gammell, author of The Pearl of Khorasan: A History of Herat
Seierstad is <b>masterful </b>. . . her book is <b>world class</b>
Aftonbladet
<b>Gripping </b>. . . Seierstad succeeds in transforming the demonised stereotype - a Taliban terrorist - into a living, comprehensible human being
Expressen
Enthralling and heart-breaking
Dagens Noeringsliv
<b>A heartbreaking account</b>
Observer