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This compelling story follows a group of young men and women from Peace Corps training in the U.S. to their assignment in Afghanistan, where they must learn to adapt to exotic food, mysterious customs, and primitive hygiene. In the midst of their assimilation into Afghan society, a military coup leads to the arrest of the author, who is accused of being an American spy. After brutal interrogation for secrets he does not possess, the author is extricated from prison, as a new communist regime takes power over the country. Thus the chain of events leading to 9/11 is set in motion.
"Sumser has provided a voice to the average Afghan and lets us get a much closer of look at a country that our government has singled out for change. Sumser doesn’t provide easy answers or explanations, but reading this book, you learn that anyone who offers those about this part of the world is simply not paying attention. Sumser did, and we benefit from it.” Chris Winters, Bookslut.com
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MEMOIR
PAPER
200 PP
5 1/2 x 8 1/2
$17.95
ISBN 0-89733-543-0

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JOHN SUMSER was born in Philadelphia and earned an MA in Philosophy at San Jose University, and an MA and PhD in Sociology at SUNY, Stony Brook, NY. He is a Professor of Communications Studies at California State University, Stanislaus. He is the author of Mass Communication or Mass Confusion: Meaning in Prime Time Television, for which he received a grant award, and a number of books in the communications field.
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Copyright © 2012 by Academy Chicago Publishers
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