An American Family: A Memoir of Hope and Sacrifice
An American Family: A Memoir of Hope and Sacrifice book cover

An American Family: A Memoir of Hope and Sacrifice

Hardcover – October 24, 2017

Price
$9.48
Format
Hardcover
Pages
288
Publisher
Random House
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399592492
Dimensions
5.8 x 1 x 8.5 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

“ An American Family is a small but lovely immigrant’s journey, full of carefully observed details from thexa0order in whichxa0Ghazala served tea at a university event, to the schedule of the police patrols in the Boston Public Garden where Khan briefly slept while he was in between apartments, to the description of Humayun’s headstone as a ‘slab of white marble with soft streaks the color of wood smoke.’. . . Most importantly, the book is an effective argument for the depth of Khan’s love for and knowledge ofxa0the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the amendments to it. He emerges as such an eloquent advocate for both documents, and for American values, that I finished An American Family with my own sense of patriotism and sense of civic obligation revitalized.” —Alyssa Rosenberg, The Washington Post “[A] moving memoir . . . a story about family and faith, told with a poet’s sensibility . . . The book is a wonderful refutation of Trump’s nativism and bigotry, but it is no partisan polemic. . . . Khizr Khan’s book can teach all of us what real American patriotism looks like.” — The New York Times Book Review “[A] wide-eyed and eloquent memoir . . . A sense of wonder about America’s promise peppers the entire narrative, even as [Khan] recounts his early struggles in the country while supporting his wife and three boys. . . . The account is especially resonant now.” — Booklist “Sometimes it takes a newcomer to point out the beauty that old-timers take for granted. America, more than any other country, was founded upon ideals: individual freedoms, equal protection and due process of law. Khan reminds us that these ideals are worth fighting—and even dying—for. The Khans truly are the most American of families.” —BookPage “An American Family holds its own alongside other fine memoirs of immigration and would be an inspired addition to any college or high school syllabus. The Gold Star father who spoke so movingly at the 2016 Democratic National Convention is just as affecting on the page.” — Shelf Awareness (starred review) “Self-effacing, the author writes movingly . . . Khan’s aspirational memoir reminds us all why Americans should welcome newcomers from all lands.” — Kirkus Reviews Khizr Khan, the eldest of ten children, was born in rural Pakistan in 1950. He moved to the United States with his wife, Ghazala, in 1980. The couple became American citizens and raised their three sons in Silver Spring, Maryland. Their middle son, U.S. Army captain Humayun Khan, a graduate of the University of Virginia and its Army ROTC program, was killed in 2004 while stopping a suicide attack near Baqubah, Iraq, and was posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and Bronze Star. Khizr Khan holds a B.A. degree from the University of the Punjab, an LL.B. from Punjab University Law College, and an LL.M. from Harvard Law School. He is a member of the Bar of the Supreme Court of the United States, the District of Columbia Bar, the New York State Bar, and the American Bar Association. Khan’s law practice includes complex civil litigation, electronic discovery, health privacy compliance law, and civil rights and veterans’ rights advocacy. He and Ghazala live in Charlottesville, Virginia. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1Shoeless in a Shaft of SunlightI carried a sheaf of papers almost as thick as my hand to the third floor of my dorm on New Campus, just across the canal from the academic buildings. My room was small and sparse, just a metal desk with a matching chair and a small electric fan to blow away a little of the Pakistani heat. It suited me. My clothes were tucked neatly into a closet, and my bed was a cotton mattress on the floor. There had been an iron bed frame, but it was too short for me, so out it went. Sleeping on the floor was better for my back, anyway.I slipped off my shoes and dropped the pile on the desk. It landed with a flat, dull thump. There was no textbook for my course in Comparative Constitutions of the World, just this pile of unbound papers, curated by the professor and kept behind the counter at a cramped bookshop in the old Anarkali bazaar. It was the oldest marketplace in Lahore, a kaleidoscope of fruit stands and food carts and stalls that sold cloth and spices and produce and a thousand other goods, almost anything anyone might want to buy. The air was perfumed with cardamom and the smoky-xadsweet tang of grilled meat that gradually curdled into a stink of horse dung and diesel and human sweat; and the alleys were crowded with rickshaws and taxis overflowing with passengers and packages. Horses pulled buggies and left droppings on the paths. Skinny men hauled large carts with unreasonably heavy loads. In the jittering splendor of Anarkali, I always noticed them, saw what poverty could force a meek man to do to earn a few rupees.It’d taken me forty minutes by bus to get to the shop, then another forty back through the unrelenting traffic of Lahore. When I got to my room, a shaft of late afternoon sun slanted through the window.Printed across the top page was constitution of the united states. Below that, deeper in the stack, were the constitutions of the Soviet Union, a fat ream of interminable articles and clauses, and of West Germany, slimmer, I would discover, but just as dull, as well as the Magna Carta. I hadn’t bothered skimming any of them as I rode the bus back through the potholed and rutted streets. It seemed too much trouble to be juggling pages of legalese while bouncing beside sweaty commuters. But now, standing alone at my desk with the kind of half-xadbored curiosity one tends to feel in a burgeoning dusk, I turned the page.The Constitution was not on the next one. Instead, the title on the second page was declaration of independence.Those were curious words, the way they were arranged into an aggressive noun. I rolled them around in my head. To declare your independence. I declare my independence.My spine tingled, straightened, a quick, involuntary spasm. I’d grasped, in that moment, a remarkable insight, a great and improbable truth I’d never conceived to be possible.In January 1972, I was a college graduate, fluent in three languages and studying law. But I knew almost nothing of America. Very few of us at the University of the Punjab did. The little I did know I’d learned from movies with forgettable titles, and those mostly involved cowboys. I’d studied none of the history or politics. I had no concept of independence as something that could be declared or demanded. If you have lived half of your life under martial law and the rest in a swirl of political chaos, Western ideals aren’t readily in your orbit. The idea that people could simply announce they were taking charge of their own affairs was so bold as to be unimaginable. It had never occurred to me.There’s a long, elegant sentence at the beginning of the Declaration of Independence about how when people dissolve the political bands which have connected them to another, they owe mankind the courtesy of explaining why. Even ignorant of the specifics, I recognized that sentence for what it was: a polite introduction to treason, the codification of a rebellion.We hold these truths to be self-xadevident .u2008.u2008. I shifted my weight from one foot to the other, too intrigued to stop reading long enough to find my chair..u2008.u2008. that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness .u2008.u2008. The thing is, those truths were not remotely self-xadevident. Not to a young man in Pakistan and not to most people in the whole of human existence. It did not matter if men were created equal. From my own experiences, I knew that men were sorted into strongmen and dictators; rich men who didn’t need a ration card to buy a bag of sugar; desperate, determined men who were beaten by police in the street; and, mostly, masses of the poor and illiterate who struggled to survive from season to season. Rights were not unalienable. There were only tenuous privileges granted by capricious powers, which meant that they were not rights at all. There were no rights.I don’t know how long I stood there, shoeless in that shaft of sunlight. The Declaration is not a long document, only thirteen hundred words, but I read conscientiously, deliberately, too enthralled to move. I’d never been so struck by a few sentences, ideas and ideals that, for a moment, removed me from where I was to where it was possible to be. Most Americans inherit the principles in those first paragraphs as a birthright. To many of them, the words are just dusty history, studied in a civics class, half-xadforgotten. But to me, a student in Pakistan, they were radically charged—xadas revolutionary as they’d been two centuries earlier when they were fixed to paper.I kept reading, through a list of grievances. I had no idea who’d written the Declaration, nor against whom those grievances had been lodged. But thenI realized: That didn’t matter. This wasn’t only foreign history. This was our story, too. The story of Pakistan, the story of the subcontinent, the story, really, of all colonized peoples everywhere and in every era. This was my story and my parents’ story and my grandparents’ story before them.Except the Americans apparently had figured out a different ending than we had.I shook off a creeping numbness in my legs, pulled the Declaration from its place atop the pile, and sat down on my mattress on the floor, my back against the wall. I’d read it first with a student’s curiosity. Now I had to read it as a researcher on the cusp of a breakthrough, picking through the details, examining the clauses and phrases, fitting them into a precise and unified theory. To know the whole, I needed to understand each piece.I was like a lonesome islander who’d found a bottle washed up on the beach, a secret script tucked inside that told of a wonderland, a fantastical place that existed, improbably and perhaps impossibly, far across the ocean. I needed to explore it, to set my mind deep into the words, let them absorb me, take me to a place so different from where I was.“Okay, we have to go, Muazzam.”My father smiled at me. Like everyone else, he called me by my middle name. He looked at his watch, a Camy on a gold band that wrapped around his wrist, but we all knew it was getting late in the day. The sky above my grandparents’ courtyard blushed with the first pinks of sunset. “The bus will come soon,” he said. “Time to pack up.”In the morning, my grandfather had walked to the butcher to buy meat in his neighborhood in Gujranwala, a small industrial city an hour north of Lahore. Sometimes he would get a cut of goat and sometimes beef and sometimes, but not often because it was special and expensive, chicken. Sometimes, the butcher would whisper, “I won’t sell you meat today,” which meant the cuts in his shop were fatty or rancid or nearly so, and he would send my grandfather away with nothing. Today, my granxaddfather had bought goat.My mother and my grandmother cooked in the kitchen at the back of my grandparents’ courtyard. There was rice, of course, and also a sweet rice because it was sort of a celebration, all of us together for the first time in a month. Vegetables were washed under water drawn from the kitchen pump. There was no refrigerator, and no electricity anyway, so what vegetables ended up on the table was a crafty calculus of what was available from the market and what would keep the longest. Turnips, potatoes, onions, and garlic could wait in a cool and dark corner until they sprouted eyes and new green shoots. Spinach would wilt in the summer heat and so had to be eaten immediately, but lettuce and cucumbers could survive a day or two.I played with my brother and my sister on the packed clay of the courtyard. I was six years old, the first of my parents’ ten children. A new sibling came on a regular two-xadyear cycle. When I turned eight, there were four of us, three brothers and a sister; at ten, there was another brother, and so on until there were five brothers and five sisters. But then, when I was six, it was just the three of us.We ate in the middle of the afternoon. My father waited to sit until his own father sat, and then waited some more until his mother told him to sit. He always deferred to his parents. If my grandmother had announced that the sky had turned green, he would have nodded and said, “Yes, Mother.” That was how a child treated his elders, with respect even if it meant that sort of silly deference.Over dinner, the adults spoke mainly of the extended family, of who was marrying whom, where a cousin had moved and why, about a nephew who’d finished university and begun a professional career. The afternoon wore on until the bright azure above the courtyard dulled to dusty cobalt edged with pink and orange. My father looked at his watch and told us it was time to leave.I had come to hate sunsets. Sunsets meant saying goodbye.My mother fussed with my brother and sister, found their shoes, settled them. The rest of us sorted the leftover food, then stacked the plates in the center of a small tablecloth that we bound up by the corners and tied into a satchel I always insisted on carrying. Then the five of us went through the door from the courtyard to the street.The bus stop was about a quarter of a mile away, and we walked along the side of the brick road. Dread settled into my stomach, and with every step it rose, burbling up through my chest, into my throat. I hated those walks.The bus came. My father got on first, which he usually did, so he could survey the seats, who was sitting where, and, if he had to, ask someone to move so he could keep his family together. People were surprisingly accommodating to such a request. My brother and sister followed. My mother hugged me. “I love you, Muazzam,” she said. “We’ll see you soon.” She kissed me on the top of the head and climbed on the bus.I ran to the other side, into the street. I always hoped they would sit on the street side, where passengers weren’t pressed against the windows to see what the sidewalk vendors were hawking, and I could watch them for a few moments while the bus idled and coughed exhaust into the evening air. I waved and smiled an oversized smile.The bus pulled away and I ran to the other side of the street, where there was a small hill. I scrambled to the top. The road was long and flat, and from up there I could watch the bus shrink into the distance until it was only a tiny blur. My eyes teared. I started to cry, and then I sobbed, great, hyperventilating heaves, alone at the top of a hill in the dusk.I lived with my grandparents, as I’d done for so long that I had no memory of having been sent there. There was no particular reason, other than my grandparents were retired and had no children at home and wanted my father’s firstborn to raise. I never asked why, never begged my mother to let me get on the bus, never pleaded to come home, because to do so would have been ungrateful and rude. Why shouldn’t I be content with this blessing? My grandparents didn’t have to divide their attention among three children. I was their only concern. Besides, one did not question his elders. But that didn’t make it hurt any less.They schooled me at home. They believed there were many varieties of children in the local schools, and they preferred I not associate with several of them—xadthe disobedient, the slothful, the unserious. When I got a little older and learned to play cricket, they would walk with me to the pitch and wait and watch, and when it was over, when the other boys went wherever it was boys went, they walked me home.There were two neighbor boys who came to play, but not often. And I had pets for a while, two chickens that hatched from eggs my grandparents hid in the nests pigeons had burrowed into one of the mud walls of the house. When they were little and yellow and downy, I chased them around with a handful of feed and a bowl of water. When they were grown, with talons and beaks, they chased me around, hungry or maybe playing but scaring me onto my cot until my grandmother shooed them away. But other than that, and visits from my parents, it was mostly just my grandparents and me.I did learn, though. My grandparents were friends with some local teachers who would give them the textbooks the other children were studying. History, civics, Islamic studies, mathematics. Books were my constant companions, my reliable friends. I read during the day and at night in the courtyard by the glow of the kerosene lamp, and when it was extinguished and I was supposed to be asleep, I would find a volume I’d hidden under my pillow and read in the moonlight. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • This inspiring memoir by the Muslim American Gold Star father and captivating DNC speaker is the story of one family’s pursuit of the American dream.
  • NAMED ONE OF THE FIVE BEST MEMOIRS OF THE YEAR BY
  • THE WASHINGTON POST
  • “Moving . . . a story about family and faith, told with a poet’s sensibility . . . Khizr Khan’s book can teach all of us what real American patriotism looks like.” —
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • In fewer than three hundred words, Khizr Khan electrified viewers around the world when he took the stage at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. And when he offered to lend Donald Trump his own much-read and dog-eared pocket Constitution, his gesture perfectly encapsulated the feelings of millions. But who
  • was
  • that man, standing beside his wife, extolling the promises and virtues of the U.S. Constitution? In this urgent and timeless immigrant story, we learn that Khizr Khan has been many things. He was the oldest of ten children born to farmers in Pakistan, and a curious and thoughtful boy who listened rapt as his grandfather recited Rumi beneath the moonlight. He was a university student who read the Declaration of Independence and was awestruck by what might be possible in life. He was a hopeful suitor, awkwardly but earnestly trying to win the heart of a woman far out of his league. He was a brilliant and diligent young family man who worked two jobs to save enough money to put himself through Harvard Law School. He was a loving father who, having instilled in his children the ideals that brought him and his wife to America—the sense of shared dignity and mutual responsibility—tragically lost his son, an Army captain killed while protecting his base camp in Iraq. He was and is a patriot, and a fierce advocate for the rights, dignities, and values enshrined in the American system.
  • An American Family
  • shows us who Khizr Khan and millions of other American immigrants are, and why—especially in these tumultuous times—we must not be afraid to step forward for what we believe in when it matters most.
  • Praise for
  • An American Family
  • An American Family
  • is a small but lovely immigrant’s journey, full of carefully observed details from the order in which Ghazala served tea at a university event, to the schedule of the police patrols in the Boston Public Garden where Khan briefly slept while he was in between apartments, to the description of Humayun’s headstone as a ‘slab of white marble with soft streaks the color of wood smoke.’”
  • —Alyssa Rosenberg,
  • The Washington Post

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(409)
★★★★
25%
(171)
★★★
15%
(102)
★★
7%
(48)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Poignant memoir

Khizr Khan's "An American Family: A Memoir of Hope and Sacrifice" is a poignant memoir that reaffirms the potential of the American dream. As most Americans first came to know Mr. Khan, I saw his memorable speech at the Democratic National Party's 2016 convention. However, this book explores many more themes than just that speech. From his humble beginnings in Pakistan, growing up as a poor farmer's son, to his dream to go to university and become a lawyer and finally his journey to the United States and becoming a citizen. Along the way, we learn of how Mr. Khan and his wife met and fell in love, raised three children, the one son giving his life in service of his country. A true immigrant's tale that will have you cheering him on as he is accepted to Harvard University, the next in tears when he learns of the death of his heroic son, who died protecting his fellow soldiers. This book doesn't care if you are a Republican, Democrat or Independent (I'm the third) and is filled with hope, determination and the author's deep and abiding patriotism for his adoptive homeland. Highly recommended.
100 people found this helpful
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Beautifully written memoir of a Muslim family, an American family

One of the most memorable speeches I've seen was Khizr Khan's at the 2016 Democratic convention. As the soft spoken Pakistani-born, Harvard educated lawyer began to speak, his wife stood beside him, grief etched on her face. Projected on the screen behind them was a photo of their son. Captain Humayan Khan was a 27 year old Muslim-American soldier who had enlisted after 9/11. He was killed in Iraq, while saving his fellow soldiers from a suicide bomber in Iraq.

The Clinton campaign had invited Khzir Khan to speak, given him complete control over the content, and scheduled him on the final night, in a prime time spot right before Chelsea Clinton. It was a significant decision for Clinton to make, choosing to not only honor a Gold Star Muslim-American family but using a moment when many Americans were watching to remind the entire nation that Muslims also have great patriotism for the United States.

In less than 300 words, Khan made an eloquent embrace of the ideas of the Constitution--and a forceful challenge to Donald Trump to read and understand those ideals that define America. When he pulled a dog-eared copy of his own Constitution from his breast pocket, offering to let the Republican nominee borrow it, it galvanized the crowd (and infuriated Trump who would spend the weekend lashing out at the Khans on Twitter and on Sunday news shows).

(Spoiler: yes, Khan really has carried a breast-pocket Constitution for years and often gives them as gifts. The memoir ends with that speech, too, including how he wrote it with his wife's help (as we learn in the memoir, she was not only descended from Afghani royalty, but was an intellectual woman in her own right, a former literature professor, fluent in several languages)

Many people wanted to know more about Khan after this. They will in this well-written memoir. He describes some interesting members of his self-educated, but poor, farm family in Pakistan and shows village life in the 1950s and 1960s. We see his years at university in the 1970s and his -very traditional- courtship of Ghazala. He shows, even in 1970s, a traditional lifestyle and culture that will be unfamiliar to many readers. He describes his early philosophical inspirations including Persian literature, as well as the meaning he derives from Islam and the Qur'an/Koran. I particularly enjoyed this part--wish there was much more--as I know so little about Islam.

It gave me a feeling of pride to read how he felt when, as a university student, he first discovered the U.S. Constitution and how it affected him. He describes their early life in Dubai before Dubai was what it is today, and Houston (which was different, too), and how he eventually wound up at Harvard, then not only "in" America but having become "an American", together with his wife and children.

It's a beautiful told story, particularly meaningful against the backdrop of the 2016 election, At the same time, reading about their son--a caring young man who taught disabled children to swim and admired Thomas Jefferson and John McCain--awas almost too painful to read. He was a real hero.

Something I really enjoyed was that there are so many kind, intelligent people who have apparently populated Khzir Khan's life. The writing is restrained, eloquent, and surprisingly uplifting in that the Khans' own intellect, idealism and kindness come through on every page.

I hope there will be teachers who find a way to bring "An American Family" into their classrooms. It is a book that should be widely read and discussed.
81 people found this helpful
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A must read for Americans of all stripes!

What a delight to read Mr. Khan's book. Once, I started, I could not put it down. It's casual style makes it an easy, interesting but also very thoughtful reading. Mr. Khan, a Muslim Pakistani American has written a beautiful memoir of hope and sacrifice, reminding us all of our American values. His journey from Pakistan to Dubai to Houston to Maryland and eventually to Virginia is beautifully and vividly written. His description of his son's death is heart wrenching. Mr. and Mrs. Khan are the best of what American has to offer. Let's hope that we Americans let not his and his son's, captain Humayun Khan's sacrifice go in vain.

Mr. Khan has proven himself to be a river full of fresh water, nourishing to so many, flowing nicely.
"So what if you are thirsty? Always be a river for everyone" : Rumi

Page # 211 Mr. Khan gives a true definition of courage; "True courage, by contrast, requires sacrifice and, quite often, physical risk for the benefit of others."
Thank you Mr. & Mrs. Khan!
5 people found this helpful
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Grief hurts

An inspiring story....to a point. The tenacity of Mr. Khan in acquiring his dreams is the inspiring part. His grief, bitterness, and blame dilute that part of the story. Too bad. I think he is probably a good man. He certainly is worth the read. History will judge the rest.
4 people found this helpful
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Beautiful. Savored it all in one reading.

This book is beautifully written. Truly an inspiring story of love and respect for America and family. The blend of Rumi poetry and Thomas Jefferson was poetic Artistic and inspiring. Not political and not morbid. Well done Mr. and Mrs. Khan on raising a fine family and an honorable soldier.
4 people found this helpful
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The Most Uplifting Book I've Read in Years (And I read 4-5 books at a time all the time)

This has been the most "soul feeding" book I have read in years. I love it and will read it again. I sent copies to my children. I am so grateful to Khizr Khan and his family for immigrating to this country, for blessing us with their wisdom and integrity, for helping me see my country through new eyes. I have come to love this family and thank God for them, especially as our country goes through this terrible scourge Donald Trump has brought upon us. I would give this book 10 stars if I could.
3 people found this helpful
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is a wonderful story of something too many of us take for ...

My wife gave this to me for Christmas. I started into the book and found it hard to put down. The Khan's lost their son, a captain in the Army, over in Iraqi. The Khan's are recognized my many as speaking for Hillary Clinton when she was running against Donald tRump. He told of his son and how important liberty and equal protection of law under our Constitution is in a very powerful speech.

Khan's book is important to read. It reminds us, as Americans, just how much freedom we have and how important it is to treat everyone with dignity. What the Khan's did to come to the United States, and then to become Americans, is a wonderful story of something too many of us take for granted. I was humbled many times while reading Khazir Khan's book AN AMERICAN FAMILY. I feel it is a must read for both those who favor immigration and those who are strongly opposed. Read this and do some thinking, in your brain and in your heart.

My only complaint is that there was no epilogue that gave tRump's comments following Khan's speech at the Democratic National Convention, tRump commenting about Ghazala, Khazir Khan's wife standing behind him and not speaking saying that maybe she wasn't allowed to speak. And of tRump stating that he too had sacrificed, by his working hard and creating jobs. Sorry, but the Khan's lost a son. tRump has done nothing but be
destructive and speak hatred towards others. I would have liked to have read maybe some of the negative comments he received from the tRump Base.

To the entire Khan family, I say THANK YOU. Thank you for what you gave to us, what you lost, but most importantly what you mean to us. You are America.
2 people found this helpful
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An inspiring account of an American family

An excellent, uplifting, and at times sad, read that I could not put down. Mr. and Mrs. Khan are true, decent, patriotic Americans and exemplify the best of what America is. I think if each of us (and one person in particular) aspired to their belief in, and protection of, our Constitution America would be a better place than it is today...
2 people found this helpful
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I purchased this as a gift for my adult daughter ...

I purchased this as a gift for my adult daughter. I have been so moved by Mr. Khan and wanted to support the nonprofit he has established. My daughter was thrilled to receive this gift. The book will be shared with other family members. Thank you!
2 people found this helpful
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So inspiring!

I got this book not knowing much about the family and not expecting a very in-depth book or for it to particularly well-written. That sounds kind of dumb, but I am interested in the story of people's lives and have read quite a few biographies and autobiographies and though they are interesting it is obvious that talented people, such as actors, are usually not very good writers.
I thought the book was very well-written, and actually checked at the end to see if there was a ghost writer lurking there somewhere. There was obviously a lot of thought and work put into this, it is not something whipped out to make a few bucks. There are a couple of one star reviews, the people who posted them obviously did not read the book because religion and Sharia law and how the author feels about it is in there. There is nothing "scary" about this family. Not much of the book is really about politics, and I think he pretty much keeps to facts. It was interesting though that when he did talk about US politics it was because he admired Reagan and other republicans. But for the most part this IS a story of an American family, and it is interesting, and very well-written.
1 people found this helpful