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My Prison My Home: One Woman's Story of Captivity in Iran [Paperback]

Haleh Esfandiari

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Book Description

Sep 27 2010

My Prison, My Home is the harrowing true story of Iranian-American scholar Haleh Esfandiari’s arrest on false charges and subsequent incarceration in Evin Prison, the most notorious penitentiary in Ahmadinejad’s Iran. Esfandiari’s riveting, deeply personal, and illuminating first-person account of her ordeal is the inspiring tale of one woman’s triumph over interrogation, intimidation, and fear. Offering a shocking, close-up view inside the paranoid mindset of the repressive Ahmadinejad regime, My Prison, My Home sheds light on a high-stakes international incident that sparked protests from some of the world’s most influential public figures—including Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and former U.S. Secretary of State Madeline Albright


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Ecco; Reissue edition (Sep 27 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061583286
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061583285
  • Product Dimensions: 20.2 x 13.6 x 1.7 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 200 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #523,569 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

“[Esfandiari] goes well beyond the headlines by deftly weaving personal narrative with a political history of modern Iran...” (Washington Post )

“A powerful addition to the prisoner-as-pawn literature.... Framing this prison story is a well-wrought and poignant memoir: Esfandiari tells of her parents, the Iran of her youth, and her journalistic and scholarly career. Also included are perceptive pages on U.S.-Iranian relations.” (Foreign Affairs )

“[Obama’s] bedside reading should be Haleh Esfandiari’s brilliant, shattering book ‘My Prison, My Home,’ in which the Wilson Center scholar recounts her own 2007 Evin nightmare.” (Roger Cohen, New York Times )

“Esfandiari recounts in measured, at times chilling, detail her journey into the bowels of the Iranian intelligence apparatus. Neither the fear nor the fury that she undoubtedly felt compromise the clarity of her observations . . . there is an unmistakable and persistent dignity.” (New York Times Book Review )

“A memoir of considerable delicacy and sophistication . . . a lucid, concise history of Iran through the twentieth century and into the first years of the twenty-first, and with it an outline of her own remarkable life.... [F]illed with vivid details and facts...powerful.” (Claire Messud, New York Review of Books )

“Esfandiari’s account of her incarceration in Tehran, her perseverance and finally freedom has wider universal implications.... We need to return time and again to the question she so poignantly poses at the end of her account.: “I owe my freedom to those who took up my cause. What of others?’” (Azar Nafisi, author of Reading Lolita in Tehran )

“A masterful memoir...an intimate tale of bravery in the face of ignorance set against the larger tragedy of U.S.-Iran relations. Esfandiari’s story—timely, suspenseful and artfully told—will fascinate experts and general readers alike.” (Madeleine K. Albright, U.S. Secretary of State, 1997–2001 )

“Esfandiari weaves together strands of her family and professional life, the problematic and complex history of American-Iranian relations, along with a reasoned eyewitness account of being held as a political prisoner.” (Dailybeast.com )

“Episodes from Esfandiari’s harrowing experience are woven together with insights about the conspiracy-minded Iranian leaders and their difficult relationship with the United States.... Esfandiari’s book will help you understand both why Iranians are so hungry for change, and why its rulers are so afraid of Twitter. ” (Double X )

“A chilling rendition of the deep enmeshment of the personal and the political... how interlocked we all are in this world.... [A] finely wrought . . . a window on a terrible and terrifying world and the trial by fire that some... are forced to endure.” (Washington Times )

“Gripping...[Esfandiari’s] book lays bare the paranoid mind-set of a regime convinced that any internal protest is part of a Western plot to organize a so-called “velvet revolution” like the mass revolts that brought down leaders of some former communist countries.” (Philadelphia Inquirer )

“[A] profoundly moving memoir . . . this is above all, a story of faith—in the human capacity to withstand mistreatment and in what people working together against tyranny can accomplish.” (Ms. Magazine )

“Esfandiari’s Kafkaesque tale of entrapment and imprisonment gives readers a shocking lesson in the horrors of Iran’s government. And her refusal to break under strict confinement and false charges . . . is inspiring and powerful.” (New York Post )

“Compelling....’My Prison, My Home’ goes well beyond the headlines by deftly weaving personal narrative with a political history of modern Iran.” (Denver Post )

“[A] gripping memoir. . . . Esfandiari writes with an elegant dryness that serves the book well, since she hardly needs to sensationalize her story.” (Bloomberg.com )

“This is an engaging book that will inform the reader and make it easier to understand the issues that define Iran in the 21st Century. ” (Rooftop Reviews )

“[Esfandiari] weaves her personal experience with the political and historical background of Iran.... Best are the more personal descriptions: the white rose from a guard... the strength of her mother...how Esfandiari...attempt[s] to maintain some sense of dignity.” (Irish Times )

From the Back Cover

On December 31, 2006, sixty-seven-year-old scholar and grandmother Haleh Esfandiari was on her way home to the United States from Iran when she became the victim of a far-fetched conspiracy theory. On the suspicion that she was part of an American plot to bring “regime change” to Iran, the Intelligence Ministry detained, interrogated, and eventuallyarrested her. For the next 105 days, she lived in solitary confinement in the notorious Evin Prison. Weaving together memories of her childhood in Iran, her story of capture and release, and her extensive knowledge of her homeland, My Prison, My Home is at once a mesmerizing story of survival and a clear-eyed portrait of Iran today and how it came to be.


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars  15 reviews
38 of 39 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book Oct 4 2009
By Gabrielle - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
A touching and well written biographical account of an American professor employed by a think tank arrested and held in an Iranian jail for her alleged crimes against Iran. The author does a great job in setting up the historical/political atmosphere in Iran at the time of her capture, and intermingling her own experiences as a prisoner to the larger fabric of life in Iran through her accounts of the lives and interests of her female guards. The author also does a great job likening her experience in the Iran's judicial system to that of the German Stasi and the Russian system of interrogation and detention. To that end, this book is instructive on the legal and judicial systems of oppressive dictatorships. Dr. Esfandiri's voice is clear, her writing is engaging, and this book is a must read for anyone interested in dictatorships, Iran, women's rights, show trials, and legal systems.
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Terrific Book Nov 3 2009
By B. Chubin - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Poignant, gripping and filled with incidental virtuosity, "My Prison, My Home" by Haleh Esfandiari is a compelling book that will appeal as much to those who simply enjoy a terrific read as to those who follow the ongoing saga of the U.S.-Iran relationship more assiduously. For, on the one hand, Esfandiari's portrayal of her arrest and incarceration in Iran's notorious Evin Prison is an inspiring tale of human dignity, resolve and bravery. And, on the other, it is a brilliant and moving account of her beloved county's rich and complex history.

As a result, she has crafted an intricate mosaic that is in part a paean to the human spirit, her spirit; and in part a cogent account of the evolution of events that led up to an Islamic regime that is as repressive, as intransigent as any in recent memory. Gracious and eloquent to the end, Esfandiari also reminds us all of the fragility of the freedoms we in this country take for granted.

To be shocked and awed by such a narrative is not the norm. One usually conjures visions of edgy fiction, juicy memoirs or newsworthy exposes for such reactions. Yet Haleh Esfandiari's "My Prison, My Home" is as gripping as any of these. I could not put it down.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing and Inspirational Story! Nov 29 2009
By Angelica - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Haleh Esfandiari's book is a window into an unfathomable experience that was all too real for this grandmother and her family. She has written it in a way that allows us to travel through the Iranian "system" and provides an inside view of the complexity of the Iranian government and the various players behind it. Most importantly, the book is an inspirational testament to the power of the human mind and spirit - Esfandiari's tenacity is remarkable and serves as a lesson in the power we all hold within! This is a MUST - READ!

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