The Places In Between
The Places In Between book cover

The Places In Between

Paperback – May 8, 2006

Price
$8.79
Format
Paperback
Pages
299
Publisher
Mariner Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0156031561
Dimensions
5.4 x 0.84 x 8 inches
Weight
9.8 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly We never really find out why Stewart decided to walk across Afghanistan only a few months after the Taliban were deposed, but what emerges from the last leg of his two-year journey across Asia is a lesson in good travel writing. By turns harrowing and meditative, Stewart's trek through Afghanistan in the footsteps of the 15th-century emperor Babur is edifying at every step, grounded by his knowledge of local history, politics and dialects. His prose is lean and unsentimental: whether pushing through chest-high snow in the mountains of Hazarajat or through villages still under de facto Taliban control, his descriptions offer a cool assessment of a landscape and a people eviscerated by war, forgotten by time and isolated by geography. The well-oiled apparatus of his writing mimics a dispassionate camera shutter in its precision. But if we are to accompany someone on such a highly personal quest, we want to know who that person is. Unfortunately, Stewart shares little emotional background; the writer's identity is discerned best by inference. Sometimes we get the sense he cares more for preserving history than for the people who live in it (and for whom historical knowledge would be luxury). But remembering Geraldo Rivera's gunslinging escapades, perhaps we could use less sap and more clarity about this troubled and fascinating country. (May) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Stewart, a resident of Scotland, has written for the New York Times Magazine and the London Review of Books , and he is a former fellow at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. In January 2002, having just spent 16 months walking across Iran, Pakistan, India, and Nepal, Stewart began a walk across Afghanistan from Herat to Kabul. Although the Taliban had been ousted several weeks earlier, Stewart was launching a journey through a devastated, unsettled, and unsafe landscape. The recounting of that journey makes for an engrossing, surprising, and often deeply moving portrait of the land and the peoples who inhabit it. Stewart relates his encounters with ordinary villagers, security officials, students, displaced Taliban officials, foreign-aid workers, and rural strongmen, and his descriptions of the views and attitudes of those he lived with are presented in frank, unvarnished terms. Nation building in Afghanistan remains a work in progress, and this work should help those who wish to understand the complexities of that task. Jay Freeman Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved PRAISE FOR THE PLACES IN BETWEEN "A striding, glorious book . . . Learned but gentle, tough but humane, Stewart . . . writes with a mystic’s appreciation of the natural world, a novelist’s sense of character and a comedian’s sense of timing . . . A flat-out masterpiece . . . The Places in Between is, in very nearly every sense, too good to be true."— The New York Times Book Review "A splendid tale that is by turns wryly humorous, intensely observant, and humanely unsentimental."— Christian Science Monitor "Stupendous . . . an instant travel classic."— Entertainment Weekly "Stewart’s 36-day walk across Afghanistan, starting just weeks after the fall of the Taliban, sets a new standard for cool nerve and hot determination . . . His description of the landscapes he traverses makes you feel you’re accompanying him through a shifting, sculpted painting . . . Sublimely written." —The Seattle Times "Stunning . . . That he has written a remarkable memoir of his trek might contribute greatly not only to our reading pleasure, but to our understanding of Afghanistan in the 21st century . . . The Places in Between effectively depicts the spectacularly stark landscape, the utter poverty and the devastation of decades of war. But far more interesting are the men . . . Stewart met along the way." — The Plain Dealer — "Stupendous . . . an instant travel classic."? Entertainment Weekly In January 2002 Rory Stewart walked across Afghanistan?surviving by his wits, his knowledge of Persian dialects and Muslim customs, and the kindness of strangers. By day he passed through mountains covered in nine feet of snow, hamlets burned and emptied by the Taliban, and communities thriving amid the remains of medieval civilizations. By night he slept on villagers’ floors, shared their meals, and listened to their stories of the recent and ancient past. Along the way Stewart met heroes and rogues, tribal elders and teenage soldiers, Taliban commanders and foreign-aid workers. He was also adopted by an unexpected companion?a retired fighting mastiff he named Babur in honor of Afghanistan's first Mughal emperor, in whose footsteps the pair was following.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 Through these encounters?by turns touching, confounding, surprising, and funny?Stewart makes tangible the forces of tradition, ideology, and allegiance that shape life in the map's countless places in between. Rory Stewart has written for the New York Times Magazine, Granta, and the London Review of Books, and is the author of The Prince of the Marshes. A former infantry officer, diplomat in Indonesia and Yugoslavia, and fellow at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire by the British government for his services in Iraq. He now lives in Kabul, where he has established the Turquoise Mountain Foundation. RORY STEWART is the best-selling author of The Places in Between and The Prince of the Marshes. A former director of the Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy andxa0Ryan Professor of Human Rights atxa0Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire for services in Iraq.xa0Hexa0is the Conservative member of Parliament for Penrith and The Border, a constituency in Northern Cumbria, where he lives with his wife. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The New Civil xadServicexa0I watched two men enter the lobby of the Hotel xadMowafaq.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 Most Afghans seemed to glide up the center of the lobby staircase with their shawls trailing behind them like Venetian cloaks. But these men wore Western jackets, walked quietly, and stayed close to the banister. I felt a hand on my shoulder. It was the hotel xadmanager.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Follow them.” He had never spoken to me xadbefore.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “I’m sorry, no,” I said. “I am xadbusy.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Now. They are from the xadgovernment.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 I followed him to a room on a floor I didn’t know existed and he told me to take off my shoes and enter alone in my socks. The two men were seated on a heavy blackwood sofa, beside an aluminum spittoon. They were still wearing their shoes. I smiled. They did not. The lace curtains were drawn and there was no electricity in the city; the room was xaddark. “Chi kar mikonid?” (What are you doing?) asked the man in the black suit and collarless Iranian shirt. I expected him to stand and, in the normal way, shake hands and wish me peace. He remained xadseated. “Salaam aleikum” (Peace be with you), I said, and sat xaddown. “Waleikum axad-xadsalaam. Chi kar mikonid?” he repeated quietly, leaning back and running his fat manicured hand along the purple velveteen arm of the sofa. His bouffant hair and goatee were neatly trimmed. I was conscious of not having shaved in eight xadweeks.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “I have explained what I am doing many times to His Excellency, Yuzufi, in the Foreign Ministry,” I said. “I was told to meet him again now. I am xadlate.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 A pulse was beating strongly in my neck. I tried to breathe slowly. Neither of us spoke. After a little while, I looked xadaway.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 The thinner man drew out a small new radio, said something into it, and straightened his stiff jacket over his traditional shirt. I didn’t need to see the shoulder holster. I had already guessed they were members of the Security Service. They did not care what I said or what I thought of them. They had watched people through hidden cameras in bedrooms, in torture cells, and on execution grounds. They knew that, however I presented myself, I could be reduced. But why had they decided to question me? In the silence, I heard a car reversing in the courtyard and then the first notes of the call to xadprayer.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Let’s go,” said the man in the black suit. He told me to walk in front. On the stairs, I passed a waiter to whom I had spoken. He turned away. I was led to a small Japanese car parked on the dirt forecourt. The car’s paint job was new and it had been washed recently. They told me to sit in the back. There was nothing in the pockets or on the floorboards. It looked as though the car had just come from the factory. Without saying anything, they turned onto the main xadboulevard.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 It was January 2002. The Americanxad-xadled coalition was ending its bombardment of the Tora Bora complex; Usama Bin Laden and Mullah Mohammed Omar had escaped; operations in Gardez were beginning. The new government taking over from the Taliban had been in place for two weeks. The laws banning television and female education had been dropped; political prisoners had been released; refugees were returning home; some women were coming out without veils. The UN and the U.S. military were running the basic infrastructure and food supplies. There was no frontier guard and I had entered the country without a visa. The Afghan government seemed to me hardly to exist. Yet these men were apparently well xadestablished.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 The car turned into the Foreign Ministry, and the gate guards saluted and stood back. As I climbed the stairs, I felt that I was moving unnaturally quickly and that the men had noticed this. A secretary showed us into Mr. Yuzufi’s office without knocking. For a moment Yuzufi stared at us from behind his desk. Then he stood, straightened his baggy pinxad-xadstriped jacket, and showed the men to the most senior position in the room. They walked slowly on the linoleum flooring, looking at the furniture Yuzufi had managed to assemble since he had inherited an empty office: the splintered desk, the four mismatched filing cabinets in different shades of olive green, and the stove, which made the room smell strongly of gasoline.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 The week I had known Yuzufi comprised half his career in the Foreign Ministry. A fortnight earlier he had been in Pakistan. The day before he had given me tea and a boiled sweet, told me he admired my journey, laughed at a photograph of my father in a kilt, and discussed Persian poetry. This time he did not greet me but instead sat in a chair facing me and asked, “What has xadhappened?”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 Before I could reply, the man with the goatee cut in. “What is this foreigner doing xadhere?”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “These men are from the Security Service,” said xadYuzufi.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 I nodded. I noticed that Yuzufi had clasped his hands together and that his hands, like mine, were trembling xadslightly.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “I will translate to make sure you understand what they are asking,” continued Yuzufi. “Tell them your intentions. Exactly as you told xadme.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 I looked into the eyes of the man on my left. “I am planning to walk across Afghanistan. From Herat to Kabul. On foot.” I was not breathing deeply enough to complete my phrases. I was surprised they didn’t interrupt. “I am following in the footsteps of Babur, the first emperor of Mughal India. I want to get away from the roads. Journalists, aid workers, and tourists mostly travel by car, but I—”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “There are no tourists,” said the man in the stiff jacket, who had not yet spoken. “You are the first tourist in Afghanistan. It is midxadwinter—there are three meters of snow on the high passes, there are wolves, and this is a war. You will die, I can guarantee. Do you want to xaddie?”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Thank you very much for your advice. I note those three points.” I guessed from his tone that such advice was intended as an order. “But I have spoken to the Cabinet,” I said, misrepresenting a brief meeting with the young secretary to the Minister of Social Welfare. “I must do this xadjourney.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Do it in a year’s time,” said the man in the black xadsuit.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 He had taken from Yuzufi the tattered evidence of my walk across South Asia and was examining it: the clipping from the newspaper in western Nepal, “Mr. Stewart is a pilgrim for peace”; the letter from the Conservator, Second Circle, Forestry Department, Himachal Pradesh, India, “Mr. Stewart, a Scot, is interested in the environment”; from a District Officer in the Punjab and a Secretary of the Interior in a Himalayan state and a Chief Engineer of the Pakistan Department of Irrigation requesting “All Executive Engineers (XENs) on the Lower Bari Doab to assist Mr. Stewart, who will be undertaking a journey on foot to research the history of the canal xadsystem.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “I have explained this,” I added, “to His Excellency the Emir’s son, the Minister of Social Welfare, when he also gave me a letter of xadintroduction.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “From His Excellency Mir xadWais?”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Here.” I handed over the sheet of letterhead paper I had received from the Minister’s secretary. “Mr. Stewart is a medieval antiquary interested in the anthropology of xadHerat.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “But it is not xadsigned.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Mr. Yuzufi lost the signed xadcopy.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 Yuzufi, who was staring at the ground, nodded xadslightly.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 The two men talked together for a few minutes. I did not try to follow what they were saying. I noticed, however, that they were using... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • New York Times
  • BestsellerThis acccount of a 36-day walk across Afghanistan, starting just weeks after the fall of the Taliban, is “stupendous…an instant travel classic” (
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • ).
  • In January 2002, Rory Stewart walked across Afghanistan, surviving by his wits, his knowledge of Persian dialects and Muslim customs, and the kindness of strangers. By day he passed through mountains covered in nine feet of snow, hamlets burned and emptied by the Taliban, and communities thriving amid the remains of medieval civilizations. By night he slept on villagers' floors, shared their meals, and listened to their stories of the recent and ancient past. Along the way Stewart met heroes and rogues, tribal elders and teenage soldiers, Taliban commanders and foreign-aid workers. He was also adopted by an unexpected companion—a retired fighting mastiff he named Babur in honor of Afghanistan's first Mughal emperor, in whose footsteps the pair was following.Through these encounters—by turns touching, confounding, surprising, and funny—Stewart makes tangible the forces of tradition, ideology, and allegiance that shape life in the map's countless places in between.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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A Post 9-11 Travelogue Through Afghanistan

Mr. Stewart has written an entertaining account of his walk across Afghanistan in 2002. The country was in shambles, the Taliban had just fallen and the Twin Towers had fallen a few months ago. As a nation, Afghanistan doesn't exist -- just a collection of warlords ruling their fiefdoms and encroaching each other's territories. So Mr. Stewart enters the county from Iran without a visa as if he was climbing Mount Everest -- because it was there.

The author is a superb storyteller and once the book has started, the reader will not be able to put it down. His writing style is conversational, as if he just arrived home and is telling you of his recent adventures. Why Harvest Books did not put this book out in hardback is beyond me. The reader should be aware that his next travel book "The Prince of the Marshes," will be out in August, 2006 where Mr. Stewart decided to move on to a less dangerous country than Afghanistan -- he went to Iraq.
180 people found this helpful
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Five-star rating for Stewart's experience; three stars for his writing of it

Try as I might, I couldn't quite enjoy "The Places In Between," Rory Stewart's travelogue from his walk across post-Taliban Afghanistan. Stewart is an amazing young man, brilliant and courageous, and his trek is an ambitious, noble effort. But his writing was so dispassionate, so resolutely matter-of-fact, that I quickly stopped caring.

Stewart is a young historian of high order, well-versed in the history of Afghanistan and other cultures of the region. He is also a throwback to an earlier age of British expeditionary, full of innate confidence that he can go just about anywhere and do alright by himself. "The Places In Between" is his chronicle of his walk through a broken culture and a broken people who don't appreciate their history nearly as much as Stewart does.

But Stewart does not bring the reader to react to the land or the people, other than to be mildly frustrated with the never-ending cast of pompous braggarts and scoundrels Stewart meets along the way. Stewart had plenty of genuine human interaction with the local folks, and yet he cannot muster a scintilla of the emotional connection that, say, George Packer conveyed about the Iraqis in "The Assassin's Gate." Whether Stewart is happy, or sad, or frustrated, or hurt, or exhausted, or sick, the prose never gets any more exciting than the sentence you're reading right now.

Kudos to Rory Stewart for his achievements - I honor them, and him. But his writing needs quite a bit of seasoning to make all that meat enjoyable. But he definitely has the talent to pull it off if he sets his mind to it, and I will give anything this young wanderer/historian puts to paper a chance.
34 people found this helpful
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A Death Defying Adventure of the Highest Order

In 1972 I did the "Overland" trip from Sydney, Australia, to London including the Malay peninsular, Penang-Madras boat, India, Nepal, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran etc. Afghanistan was considered pretty dangerous then and we travelled in convoy with another couple, also in a VW Kombi, from ghastly Pakistan and the graveyard of British regiments, the Khyber Pass ( the Kabul pass is far more spectacular), south-west to Kandahar (vineyards on the hills) and north-west to Herat. What Mr Stewart did, to walk directly east from Herat to Kabul would have been considered insane then. It is a sad measure of the continued failure of the human race that it seems even more dangerous now. His book is tremendous. It is not meant to be anti-religion. But its brilliant insights into Islam are just as scary as looking into the pig-ignorance of the modern day Bible Belt in the US (where I now live) or the smug Vatican or the Israel-Palestine impasse, in general. As long as we have religion, there is no bright logical future for humans on earth.
25 people found this helpful
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Now This is Brilliance of a Different Kind

OK. Let's say you aspire to be a writer, but you have no talent. What to do? Go to the hairiest place you can think of (Afghanistan), and do the hairiest thing you can think of (walk across Afghanistan). Wow, that sounds interesting and full of potential for insights, poignant moments, introspection, stunning moments of revelation, and natural wonders.

Oh, yeah, but if you can't write, you can't really capture any of that can you? And, if you are without wit, insight, reflection and a keen observing eye, you probably don't experience any of it.

Geesh, what a waste. Next time, Rory, just stay home.
22 people found this helpful
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Much worth reading, but much worth skipping

Other reviewers note Stewart's courage and his recent service in Iraq. Certainly, he chose a difficult and challenging journey. Nonetheless, I found this to be an often unsatisfying read. Stewart offers us scholarly history and a glimpse at a land rarely seen even by Afghans. Unfortunately, he's a big whiner, approached his journey with an enormous sense of entitlement, and displays a lack of cultural insight or sensitivity. He makes ludicrous claims about the benficience of the British Empire and often comes across as a Calvinistic scold. These negative traits are most apparent in the first third and last fifth of the book. Stewart has made other journeys, on foot, in difficult geography and seemed to expect Himalyan hospitality in war torn, tribal Afghanistan. Once he stops complaining and focuses on his surroundings, the journey is fascinating. Unfortuately, the overly entitled foreign service officer reappears as the story ends.

Unlike other grouchy travelers, like Paul Theroux, Stewart seems devoid of humor and an ability to see himself in context. I'm not sure I want to read his Iraqi chronicle after seeing where he claims that his administrative innovations in southern Iraq should be implemented countrywide (in places far more heterogenous and strife-torn). It seems like it would just be more of the same.
21 people found this helpful
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Could have been a great book but..

We read this book for book club. I suggested it based on a fantastic front page New York Time Book Review. It didn't live up to it. The descriptions of this truly incredible undertaking felt so distant and lacking in detail. I will say though, that this book did engender one of the more interesting discussions we have had in our group. The situation in Afghanistan, the culture, the people, were truly astounding to us. If the author had not been so brave (and foolhardy?) as he was to undertake this journey and write about it, we would not have this window into this country. So it is worth the read. I can't help but think, though, that in the hands of a good writer this would have been a knockout book.
18 people found this helpful
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Somewhere in Afghanistan, the Point Got Lost

It's an odd sensation in a travel book to be guided by a traveler who remains, for 300 pages, a cipher. Stewart reveals virtually nothing about himself or about his motive for undertaking his dangerous, difficult, and (evidently) unrewarding journey--on foot, no less. In fact, there's something distinctly bratty about Stewart's approach to the whole endeavor: he made the trip because he "wanted to," he repeats, and one can almost hear him stamping his foot; his evident lack of any need to support himself for years at a time (he has bundles of cash at his disposal and, at the end of the journey to Afghanistan, returns to "his room" in his parents' house in Scotland) and his conviction that he should be fed and housed by strangers all the way across Afghanistan (but not accompanied or told where to go) have a distinctly elitist and slightly juvenile ring to them, which is not completely surprising given Stewart's parentage and social status (read his Wikipedia biography to get a hint of the manor to which he was born). The people that he meets, meanwhile, are with few exceptions entirely dreadful--dull when they are not outright dangerous, rude when they are not simply miserable, malicious and sadistic when they are not merely indifferent. Nor are the villages he visits anything to write home about, each one essentially identical to another in its revolting, raw-sewage-and-war-debris sameness. The landscape--which Stewart frequently cannot see because he is walking through blinding snowstorms--gets even shorter shrift, and Stewart only occasionally remembers to describe the quality of light at sunset or the shape of a mountain range. Indeed, one gathers that all of that was wholly secondary; his goal was the destination (Kabul), never the journey. (And that's perhaps no surprise, given how ghastly Afghanistan appears in Stewart's version.) The inclusion, meanwhile, of the numerous grade-school-quality sketches that Stewart inked into his journal is a blunder that undermines what little seriousness the book can lay claim to. Stewart hints occasionally that he's bedeviled by unhappy memories or regrets as he walks, but that's as close as he lets anyone come to a glimpse of what's taking place inside his head or of what his reactions are to most of the things that happen to him. That's a fatal flaw in a book that has so little else to offer the reader. If the Afghans are essentially unknowable and alien, if the places are unremarkable and monotonous, and if the narrator slowly disappear as he writes, the whole edifice of the project crumbles. Stewart's only tears in the book are for an animal and never for the human misery he traipses through, as much proof as anyone should surely need that he is (or was) a callow, overprivileged youth on walkabout and that _The Places In Between_ got published through high-society connections and not because Stewart had anything particularly meaningful to say. In a country as barren and forbidding as Afghanistan, the places in between are largely voids, and it is a void that Stewart's book most faithfully transmits.
13 people found this helpful
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Cultural imperialism at its worst

At first glance, this seems to be a remarkable book, but when you step back and put it in context, Rory Stuart seems to be something of a reprehensible human being. Here is a well off Englishman, wandering the poorest parts of Afghanistan, begging sustenance from poor Afghans, and using the Islamic tradition of caring for guests to guilt them into caring for him. Why can't this jerk pay his own way through the country? Why does he have to mooch off of everyone he meets along the way? Simply because he can. He knows how to manipulate the Afghans, and he does it throughout the book.

Kind of a sad tale about a sad little man.
12 people found this helpful
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Very superficial look

I was disappointed in this book. Having read a number of travel/walk-about books about the Middle East, I found this one to be a mere overview of Afghanistan. (An example of a very good book written by a foreigner about a little-known culture is THE BOOKSELLER OF KABUL.) We learn close to nothing about the people of Afghanistan in Stewart's book; he speaks of the people he meets along the way more in stereotypes than as individuals.

And the selfishness, the narcissism of undertaking a trek across this country in the harshest winter and putting other people at risk when the Afghani goverment insists he takes officials along with him! The nerve of him demanding food and shelter at each stop from people he describes as dirt poor! And, adopting an old dog, forcing it to make the awful walk (or drag, since he describes dragging the poor beast along many times) with him!

The proceeds from this book should go to those whom this unthinking man forced himself on. Unfortunately, it's too late for the dog . . . .
12 people found this helpful
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Audio and book versions

The book was first published as a hardcover by Picador in England on 4 June 2004 (ISBN 0330486330). A second revised edition was published as a paperback in England on 1 April 2005 (ISBN 0330486349). On May 8 2006 a further revised American paperback edition was published by Harvest Books (ISBN 0156031566). An audio recording was made in 2006 narrated by Rory Stewart while he was in Kabul and published by Recorded Books (ISBN 1428116702) based on the Harvest Books edition. I believe all three books have seen slight improvements with each new edition.

The audibook version is highly recommend as a supplement to the text. It is narrated by Rory (from a studio in Kabul) and his pronunciations of Afghan names and places are priceless, as well as his overall character and tone.

Comments: Scottish author and historian Stewart walked across some of the most difficult mountain terrain in Afghanistan in the early winter months of 2002 right after 9/11 (and lived to tell about it). He saw a land of contrasts: a culture based on feudal-like systems living in mud huts -- but with modern weapons and vehicles. Villages were people never traveled more than a few miles from home their whole life -- but had seen international forces from the USSR, USA, NATO and elsewhere pass through. People who were one step away from starvation willingly giving food to a passing stranger -- then shooting at him for sport and fun the next.

Afghanistan has always been resistant to understanding, but Rory, by traveling and living with the mountain tribe people who account for most of the countries population, comes as close as any to pulling back the curtain and revealing the character of the country in their own words and actions. A classic of travel literature, anthropology.
11 people found this helpful