Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Read Online and Download Ebook Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Download Ebook Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Will reviewing behavior affect your life? Numerous say yes. Reading is a great habit; you could create this behavior to be such fascinating way. Yeah, reviewing routine will not just make you have any kind of favourite task. It will be one of assistance of your life. When analysis has come to be a routine, you will not make it as disturbing tasks or as boring activity. You can obtain lots of advantages and also importances of reading.

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif


Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif


Download Ebook Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Find your very own methods to meet your leisure time. Thinking about reviewing a book as one of the activities to do in extra time might be proper. Reviewing a publication is priceless and it will interest in the brand-new points. Reviewing, as taken into consideration as the boring activity, might not rally be as just what you consider. Yeah, analysis can be enjoyable, reading can be delightful, as well as reading will offer you new points, even more points.

By spending couple of times in a day to check out Cities Of Salt, By Abdelrahman Munif, some experiences and lessons will be acquired. It will certainly not associate with how you should or take the tasks, however take the benefits of how the lesson and also impact t get. In this case, this offered book truly comes to be motivations for the people as you. You will constantly require new experience, won't you? However, often you have no enough time and money to undergo it. This is why, via this book, you could get over the willingness.

Now, when you begin to read this Cities Of Salt, By Abdelrahman Munif, possibly you will consider exactly what you can obtain? Numerous things! In brief we will certainly answer it, however, to know just what they are, you need to read this book on your own. You recognize, by reviewing continually, you could really feel not only far better however likewise brighter in the life. Reading ought to be acted as the practice, as hobby. So when you are meant to check out, you could easily do it. Besides, by reading this publication, you could likewise quickly make ea brand-new way to assume and feel well as well as intelligently. Yeah, life wisely and also smartly is much needed.

This Cities Of Salt, By Abdelrahman Munif deals an intriguing subject. If you have not yet try reading this sort of publication, this is your time to begin and begin it. Be the very first title to read in this sort of topic provides the a lot more valuable situation. You may be actually typical with this book, however you have no idea to also read it, have you? To cover this condition, this offered publication is served in soft data to be readily available conserved in your charming device.

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif

Banned in Saudi Arabia, this is a blistering look at Arab and American hypocrisy following the discovery of oil in a poor oasis community.

Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations

View or edit your browsing history

After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Product details

Paperback: 640 pages

Publisher: Vintage; 1st Vintage International ed edition (July 17, 1989)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 039475526X

ISBN-13: 978-0394755267

Product Dimensions:

5 x 0.1 x 8 inches

Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.2 out of 5 stars

38 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#71,893 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This is one of the first of many I read about Arabia, the Empty Quarter & Bedouins. It is an excellent book which I am rereading but the heavy hard cover is really painful. It's a long novel based on facts about a village which is affected by the oil companies. The spread of oil drilling is like a cancer & the morals of the Westerns is in question as to what they did to a culture & how they behaved in front of aforeign culture. It's an eye opener & was banned in Saudi Arabia.I highly recommend for the truth about oil in the Middle East & for the authors style of writing. It's translator was excellent.

I realize the translator has been critical of reviews that suggest that this novel is about oil. Okay, so it is not about oil, but it is about an oil boom, particularly the impact that the boom has on the small Bedouin community where it takes place. Munif's boom has much in common with oil booms that took place in Pennsylvania and Texas and with the gold rush that initially began on Gen. Sutter's ranch in California, as related in Blaise Cendrars' "Gold." What sets this novel apart is that it is placed in the Arabian Desert, a place of which most westerners (including myself) have known very little. In beautiful prose, Munif exposes the culture of this oasis village bit by bit, character by character. The village, perhaps like most of Saudi Arabia, is extremely conservative. Before the arrival of the oil explorers, the Bedouins had experienced almost no exposure to other customs, styles of dress, religious beliefs or technologies. Employment by the oil company puts some money in the Bedouins' pockets, but - as one might expect - not without upsetting their social order. The oilmen, of course, are as ignorant of the Bedouins' culture as the Bedouins are of theirs. "Theirs" being, one supposes, America. The story begins in the 1930s, which happens to be the same decade in which American geologists from Standard Oil of California discovered oil in Saudi Arabia. Munif does not directly reveal that, but it seems clear enough that his novel - which is the first of a trilogy - is the story of that discovery and the subsequent formation of ARAMCO, the oil giant. The story is told through the eyes of the Bedouins. The oilmen and the Saudi royal family are seen, for the most part, as the Bedouins' adversaries. Munif maintains a continuous flow of events that render the cultural changes understandable. His main characters are three-dimensional, and by the novel's end Munif has acquainted the reader with his main characters and with life in this rural Saudi culture.About halfway through this novel, I decided I like it enough to order the second book of the trilogy. But I subsequently changed my mind because I became frustrated with having to learn so many characters. Within 600 pages Munif introduces about 300 characters, often without a hint as to whether a particular character will become a main figure or will only receive one mention. As a result, I found myself having to underline names, making lists, and frequently backing up to figure out exactly who a particular character was. Perhaps my diligence was overkill, but I am not sure I would have understood the novel adequately without doing that. Had it not been for the "over-charactered" aspect, I would have rated this novel a 5-star. It does, however, rate at least a 4 because, in an entertaining and enlightening way, it presents a perfectly believable picture of what happens to a community with roots in antiquity when it is dragged into a modern century.

Cities of salt is a historical fiction book set in an unnamed Arab country during the first half of the 20th century. It describes the changes in the place, a semi-arid desert, and its local Muslim inhabitants over this time period. Specifically, it shows how the local Arab communities are changed for the worse by the intrusion of Western individuals, Western corporations, and Western society as embodied by the oil corporations.This society begins as an egalitarian community based on family ties and extended kinships. Everybody knows and trusts each other. Gates, land titles and other ways in which individuals divide up resources do not exist, and all is shared in common. Likewise guns and violence are almost non-existent as conflicts are solved slowly and surely by long and lengthy discussions.Then Western geologists enter the scene and discover oil. Western oil corporations are quick to follow. To get access to the oilwells, and to ship them out via pipelines requires control of land, which of course is communally owned and used. To solve this dilemma, the corporations try to cajole and bribe the locals to give up rights to these lands. This often did not work, so the corporations resort to a tactic that was used against Native Americans and Africans in the previous four centuries. Specifically, the local tribes had nominal leaders. The corporate representatives would bribe these leaders with modern marvels such as the telephone, repeating guns, television, ice, etc... Slowly these local leaders would switch loyalties from their own tribes to the Westerners. Eventually, these local leaders, and their henchman, would sell out their fellow Arabs, order locals of the land needed by the oil corporations, and back up their orders with their newly acquired guns.Overall, the egalitarian, communal society that existed was transformed into a dictatorship propped up by Western oil interests. A ruling class was created that was distinct from and unrepresentative of the people at large. Oil, and the control of its acquisition, transportation, and distribution, replaced people and communal consensus as the source of power. And this is how many of the modern Arab nations came into being. All in all this is a great book, probably the best fiction book to read to understand the thinking of Al Qaeda and roots of Arab anger at America. The cloest way to describe it is the Arab world's version of America's Grapes of Wrath; the destruction of a communal and family-based way of life by modern corporations.

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif PDF
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif EPub
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif Doc
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif iBooks
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif rtf
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif Mobipocket
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif Kindle

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif PDF

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif PDF

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif PDF
Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif PDF

Cities of Salt, by Abdelrahman Munif


Home