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However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home
 
 
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However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home [Hardcover]

Awista Ayub (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 25, 2009
"The young Afghan women in However Tall The Mountain are pioneers. Their story is one of resilience and courage. This book is a testament to the power of hope and the will to dream in a country where so many dreams have been cut short."
--Khaled Hosseini, bestselling author of The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns

"Awista Ayub has movingly captured the indomitable spirit of Afghan women in this chronicle of brave girls who risked persecution and worse to pursue the dreams of ordinary childhood. In doing what they love most in life - playing soccer - the girls become emblems of the fight for equality and human rights under the Taliban. Their story reminds us that there is always hope and possibility for a brighter future - even in the wreckage left by war and conflict."
--Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton

A ball can start a revolution.

Born in Kabul, Awista Ayub escaped with her family to Connecticut in 1981, when she was two years old, but her connection to her heritage remained strong. An athlete her whole life, she was inspired to start the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange after September 11, 2001, as a way of uniting girls of Afghanistan and giving them hope for their future. She chose soccer because little more than a ball and a field is needed to play; however, the courage it would take for girls in Afghanistan to do this would have to be tremendous--and the social change it could bring about by making a loud and clear statement for Afghan women was enough to convince Awista that it was possible, and even necessary.

Under Taliban rule, girls in Afghanistan couldn't play outside of their homes, let alone participate in a sport on a team. So, Awista brought eight girls from Afghanistan to the United States for a soccer clinic, in the hope of not only teaching them the sport, but also instilling confidence and a belief in their self-worth. They returned to Afghanistan and spread their interest in playing soccer; when Awista traveled there to host another clinic, hundreds of girls turned out to participate--and the numbers of players and teams keep growing. What began with eight young women has now exploded into something of a phenomenon. Fifteen teams now compete in the Afghanistan Football Federation, with hundreds of girls participating.

Against all odds and fear, these girls decided to come together and play a sport that has reintroduced the very traits that decades of war had cruelly stripped away from them--confidence and self-worth. In However Tall the Mountain, Awista tells both her own story and the deeply moving stories of the eight original girls, describing their daily lives back in Afghanistan, and how they found strength in each other, in teamwork, and in themselves--taking impossible risks to obtain freedoms we take for granted. This is a story about hope, about what home is, and in the end, about determination. As the Afghan proverb says, However tall the mountain, there's always a road.


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference $10.20

However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home + Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A group of Afghan girls are introduced to soccer American-style in this subtly composed, eye-opening tale of cultural clash and transformation. The author—the director of the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange whose own family emigrated from Kabul to Connecticut when the Soviet-backed coup took over the country in 1978—first sponsored eight Afghan girls to come to America to play soccer for six weeks in 2004. Having been grouped informally as a team only recently back in Afghanistan, where girls were rarely encouraged to play sports, the girls spent six weeks at soccer camps in America—in Washington, D.C.; Connecticut; and Cleveland—playing soccer publicly for the first time. Ayub's account explores the diverse stories of the eight girls, who had lived through the recent nightmare era of the Taliban and in some cases were prohibited from attending school; excited and a little frightened by the attention they garnered in America, the eight girls ranging from 10 to 16 then had to return to their humble, war-town families with the hope they could use their newfound leadership skills to teach others. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

In 2006 I was at home watching the ESPY Awards when two young women from Afghanistan were honored with the Arthur Ashe Courage Award. I was moved to tears and knew immediately that these brave women needed to tell their stories. By facing extraordinary obstacles and even life-threatening danger--just by playing a sport that we take for granted--they came together to play soccer and in the process they have brought about change in a country where a woman's very identity has been brutally stripped away." -- Gretchen Young --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Hardcover: 235 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion; 1 edition (August 25, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1401322492
  • ISBN-13: 978-1401322496
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,356,657 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars sweet, light story of girls in afghanistan, August 27, 2009
This review is from: However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home (Hardcover)
This sweet memoir of a girl's soccer team in Afghanistan manages to touch on many of the tougher issues facing citizens, and women in particular, in Afghanistan. The tone is light as the narrator describes a small set of teenage girls learning to pass, dribble, and cooperate on the playing field; but there are harsher moments, too, which the narrator incorporates without unnecessary drama. Soccer is considered a boy's sport in Afghanistan, so the formation of a team - and eventually a league - was frequently controversial.

Part of the story is about the intensive, six-week long training camp organized for the team of novice players in the US. The narrator describes their impressions of America and their increasing self-confidence on the field. They don't win many games, but they gain skills and expertise that make them the finest female soccer players in Afghanistan by the time they return home.

Spliced in with the narrator's account of the training camp are the stories of individual girls in the year following their trip. Most of these personal accounts are bittersweet - one of the girls goes into a severe depression because she misses the excitement and variety of her trip, and has a hard time pulling out of it. One girl betrays the others, and joins another team - her new coach wants her to invite all the girls who trained in America, but she doesn't. She wants the glory for herself. One faces extreme disapproval from her family, who don't have a problem with a girl playing soccer so much as they refuse her the right to her own pleasures, goals, or accomplishments - the head of the family, her older brother, tells her, "It is enough that you are going to school...That's all for you."

In the last third of the memoir, the narrator visits Afghanistan and tries to give a broader perspective on the role of sports, and women's team sports, in the country. She interviews a politician who won a spot in parliament, but whose only previous experience was on the national basketball team. She talks to the men who organize national sport's leagues in Afghanistan, and probes the reasons why they choose - or don't choose - to sponser women's teams. She argues that being able to play a sport, and in particular a men's sport, builds the pride and self-confidence that she thinks is key to righting women's place in Afghanistan and an important part of building a peaceful country.

HOWEVER TALL THE MOUNTAIN is short and airy, more like an hors d'oeuvre than a main course. I felt pretty neutral about it on the whole, often charmed but never riveted or deeply engaged.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars amazing true story . . . told ineffectively, November 10, 2009
This review is from: However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This review is difficult to write. I really want to like this book. I really like the story behind the book. However, the book is not well-written. Some of the book is written in the present-tense, and other parts in the past-tense. The timeline is hard to discern, and what should have been the climax was the very first story in the book. There wasn't a clear narrative, unfortunately. Also, the writing was very amateur. Overall, the book deserves a much better editor, perhaps even a ghost writer to assist in tying all the disparate pieces together into a cohesive story. A professional writer could have made characters of these girls, engaging the reader. I have just read the book and I can hardly imagine what each girl looks like or tell you the difference between one and another. That is how the stories began to blend together.

The stories about the girls on the team jump all over the place. First, the story of the girls playing in America is told. Then, for each girl on the team, the stories of their lives before, during and after the American trip is told. The author's own reminisces are interspersed. Finally, the book ends with some of the author's interviews with sportspeople of Afghanistan who have had an influence on women's sports. I was confused by the constant jumping in time, from 2005 back to 2004 to 2006. It was unclear to me what the intention of the book was - it was neither clearly a true story told in narrative form, or a non-fiction book told in topical chapter form.

I didn't want to give it a bad review because the story it tells _is_ really interesting if you can get past these flaws. No, I wasn't glued to the book but it WAS inspirational to read about the advancements in women's sports and how it is changing these young girls.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Standing tall in a culture of oppression, July 22, 2009
This review is from: However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, and a Journey Home (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Imagine if you will, that you are a female living in a war torn country. You are essentially denied any freedom because of your gender. You cannot play sports or go to school. You can't watch TV or listen to music. You are not even able to leave the house without a male relative escorting you. In short, you are totally oppressed. This is what life under the Taliban was like for girls and women in Afghanistan.

After over 30 years of Taliban rule, Afghanistan is slowly crawling out from under the oppressive thumb of the religious fundamentalism that they were forced under in the late 70's. In this book we see how social views have been clouded by Taliban rule to such a degree that it is still hard for Afghan women to go out and make a mark for themselves.

Awista Ayub's However Tall the Mountain, is the story of eight young girls and their stories of life in Afghanistan. It is also her story. As an Afghan refugee who was smuggled out of the country as a toddler and raised in America. It was her vision that led to the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange (AYSF) and allowed soccer to be introduced into the lives of these eight Afghan girls.

Afghan girls and women are now allowed to be educated and play sports as they did before Taliban rule, but much of the freedom they had before this, is still not totally within their grasp. In this book, we see how the young girls who are now playing soccer and making a name for themselves still face adversity. They are taunted by boys and men for playing a "man's game", soccer, but these remarkable young women press on and persevere as they lead the way for other young girls to do the same.

This is also the homecoming story of Awista Ayub. Separated from her homeland as a toddler, she was raised in America. Because of the AYSE, she returned to her homeland for an extended visit and began to rediscover her native country.

This is an inspiring story that will open your eyes and make you appreciate the freedoms that we American often take for granted.
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