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review 2016-09-30 05:29
A House Without Windows, by Nadia Hashimi
A House Without Windows - Nadia Hashimi

Nadia Hashimi’s A House Without Windows is the kind of book tailor-made to make feminist Westerners seethe. Hardly a chapter goes by without a new variation on injustice to Afghani women. And yet, Hashimi is a skilled enough writer to keep her message from overwhelming the very interesting mystery that anchors the novel. We get to ponder the abuses of women accused of zina (sex outside of marriage, prohibited by sharia law) for being troublesome while also trying to figure out if Zeba, the protagonist, really did murder her husband with a hatchet...

 

Read the rest of my review at A Bookish Type.

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review 2016-09-27 00:00
A House Without Windows
A House Without Windows - Nadia Hashimi I really enjoyed this book, more so than The Pearl That Broke Its Shell. The plot seemed to have a bit more to it. The characters are nuanced with their own strengths and challenges.

While I really enjoy her writing, I have trouble reality checking it at times because I know so little about life in Afghanistan.

As a result I was never sure whether the every day resistance engaged in by the characters, their efforts to push back and their 'massaging' of the country's judicial were implausible. I just had to trust the author and go where the story took me. Which really was a good ride.
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review 2016-04-19 00:00
A House Without Windows
A House Without Windows - Nadia Hashimi

A special thank you to Edelweiss and HarperCollins Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

This unforgettable story from the author of The Pearl That Broke Its Shell is an emotional journey of sisterhood, friendship, love, and hope that highlights the plight of women that are bound by a traditional culture.

Awaiting trial for the murder of her husband, Zeba meets a group of women in prison that are confined and defined by the immoral crimes they have committed; Nafisa is an eighteen-year-old who was imprisoned to protect her from an honour killing, Latifa is a twenty-five year-old that chooses to be imprisoned because it is safer for her to be incarcerated than her actual life, and Mezghan a twenty-year-old who is pregnant, unmarried and waiting on a court order. When Zeba arrives at the womens' prison, she is in a state of shock and a shattered version of her former self. She is unable to account for her whereabouts at the time of the murder and cannot bring herself to speak of the events to defend herself. Her case is assigned to Yusef, an Afghan-born American lawyer who has returned to his birthplace out of commitment to human rights. This is his first case, and it proves to be more than what he originally thought.

This astonishing, and sometimes disturbing novel is a glimpse into what the modern women of Afghanistan face.

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text 2015-03-15 10:56
Medal Winner!
A House Without Windows - Stevie Turner

I am pleased to announce 'A House Without Windows' has been chosen for a medal in the New Apple Book Awards 2014 Suspense/Thriller category!

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text 2015-01-15 12:33
Winner!
A House Without Windows - Stevie Turner

I am pleased to announce that my third novel 'A House Without Windows' has won the Goodreads' eBookMiner Book of the Month Competition.  Thanks to all who voted for it and who have kindly agreed to write a review.  Please contact the Goodreads' eBookMiner team for your free copy, and thanks in advance for your review.

 

Best wishes,

Stevie

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