From Publishers Weekly
From 1998 to 2001, when they were kicked out of Iran, Abdo (No God but God) and Lyons were the first American citizens to be allowed to work as journalists in the country since the 1979 Islamic revolution. This unprecedented access allowed the husband-and wife team to conduct the daily observations and hundreds of interviews that form the basis of this engrossing book of reportage. Focusing mainly on the society's elite-they were apparently unable to gain access to more people in the lower classes-the two are still able to develop a complex, nuanced view of Iran. They show how, even before the fall of the shah, those who called for democracy were outmaneuvered by the Ayatollah Khomeini, who merged hatred of the shah with a skillful understanding of Iran's Islamic tradition. The authors offer historical background on Khomeini and his rise to power, the electoral success of the current president, Mohammad Khatami, and other clerics and dissidents. They also shed light on the more recent challenges to the regime, most notably from the press and from students. For the past few years, many Western observers have seen Iran as a society torn between hard-line clerics and moderate reformers, pinning their hopes on Khatami. But as Abdo and Lyons show, Khatami himself has betrayed true reform, among other ways by making speeches critical of student protests. As a result, Abdo and Lyons conclude, it is unlikely Iran will move toward democracy any time soon.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
While the media of the West focuses on the Israeli-Palestinian violence and the looming war against Iraq, the turmoil in Iran has generally been relegated to the back burner. Yet, as the authors illustrate, that turmoil, while presently at low boil, could easily explode and flame out of control. Abdo and Lyons are husband-and-wife journalists who were based in Iran from 1998 to 2001 until they were pressured to leave by the government. They provide a riveting, firsthand view of the ongoing struggle between reformers and hard-line Islamic clerics. Many of the reformers are also clerics, and a few were close associates of Ayatollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic. In the end, however, the future destiny of Iran is at issue; the reformers want a true democratic republic, albeit within an Islamic framework; the hard-line conservatives hope to maintain the power of a religious vanguard that can suppress "un-Islamic" writings and ideas while overruling an elected legislature. This is an unsettling but informative and important book.
Jay FreemanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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