INFIDEL (BOOK)


'''Infidel''' is an autobiographical book and ''New York Times'' bestseller by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, published in 2007. It is a translation of the Dutch book ''Mijn Vrijheid'' ("My Freedom"), which was released on September 29, 2006. [2] It was released in English on February 1, 2007. For security reasons, a female ghostwriter of the second part of the book remains anonymous.[3]

Contents
Synopsis
Reception
Criticism
References
External links
Excerpts
Reviews
Interviews on book

Synopsis


Hirsi Ali writes about her youth in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Kenya, about her flight to the Netherlands where she applied for political asylum, her university experience in Leiden, her work for the Labour Party and her transfer to the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy. The book ends with her return to the Tweede Kamer (Dutch parliament), over two months following the murder of Theo van Gogh, with whom she made the film ''Submission''.

Reception


The launch of the book in the Netherlands was a great success, with the initial print run selling out in two days. [4] A review in de Volkskrant concluded that "anyone who discovers Hirsi Ali's tumultuous history can only sympathise with her". The German edition of the book, ''Mein Leben, meine Freiheit'', debuted in the top 20 of the bestseller list of Der Spiegel. [5]
The book was also well received upon the release of the English edition in 2007. Reviewing the book for The Sunday Times, Christopher Hitchens called it a "remarkable book".[6] Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anne Applebaum, writing in The Washington Post, said "''Infidel'' is a unique book, Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a unique writer, and both deserve to go far."[7] A review in The New York Times described the book as a "brave, inspiring and beautifully written memoir".[8] In an interview, Newsweek editor Fareed Zakaria described it as "an amazing book by an amazing person". [9]
Criticism

The book was also praised by Andrew Anthony in The Observer, though with a critical note: "But of course in voicing her opinion in the style she does, she risks lumping together over a billion people from different nations, cultures and traditions as a single 'problem'".[10] A book review in the The Economist echoed Anthony's sentiment, stating "much as she tries, the kind of problems that Ms Hirsi Ali describes in ''Infidel'' are all too human to be blamed entirely on Islam. Her book shows that her life, like those of other Muslims, is more complex than many people in the West may have realised. But the West's tendency to seek simplistic explanations is a weakness that Ms Hirsi Ali also shows she has been happy to exploit."[11] Lorraine Ali in Newsweek magazine gave the book a negative review, claiming that the reader will feel "manipulated" by Hirsi's story and "Hirsi Ali is more a hero among Islamophobes than Islamic women." and said that, Hirsi sounds as "single-minded and reactionary as the zealots she's worked so hard to oppose."[12].

References


1. "Infidel: My Life: The Story of My Enlightenment"
2. "Schaterlachen om vrijheid van Ayaan"
3. "De zware beproevingen van een moslimmeisje"
4. "Boek Hirsi Ali in twee dagen uitverkocht"
5. "Mohammed wird Liebe bedeuten"
6. A voice that will not be silenced Christopher Hitchens
7. The Fight for Muslim Women Anne Applebaum
8. No Rest for a Feminist Fighting Radical Islam William Grimes
9. Show 308 Transcript- February 23, 2007
10. Taking the fight to Islam Andrew Anthony
11. Dark secrets
12. Only One Side of the Story Lorraine Ali

External links



AEI website

Official book website
Excerpts


Introduction

Chapter 1

Edited excerpt
Reviews


The High Price of Freedom Sandip Roy

Un-Veiled Joel Whitney

No Rest for a Feminist Fighting Radical Islam William Grimes

Dark secrets

The Fight for Muslim Women Anne Applebaum

A voice that will not be silenced Christopher Hitchens

Taking the fight to Islam Andrew Anthony

Out of Europe: Infidel, by Ayaan Hirsi Ali Luuk van Middelaar

A Muslim woman, her leadership and its costs Sol Schindler

A feminist for the ages ... Theodore Dalrymple
Interviews on book


Infidel - An interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali Joel Whitney

How `Infidel' Hirsi Ali Rejected Islam, Survived Death Threats Carole Zimmer

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Tom Ashbrook

Critic of Islam finds new home in U.S. William C. Mann

Enter the Dutch ‘Infidel,’ Faithful to Herself Laurie Goodstein

My life as an infidel Penny Wark

Who Says “Ladies First”? Deroy Murdock

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