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June 1, 2017
Pakistani American Khan, who set off fireworks when he addressed immigrant-averse candidate Donald Trump at the 2016 Democratic National Convention, relates his family's emigration from Pakistan, his soldier son's life and death, and his commitment to the U.S. Constitution, which he carries with him in pocket format.
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
September 15, 2017
A politically pointed immigrant success story mingled with equally pointed tragedy.A native of Pakistan, Khan thought of America as a land of cowboys--when, that is, he thought of anything other than enduring homegrown oppression. "If you have lived half of your life under martial law and the rest in a swirl of political chaos," he writes meaningfully, "Western ideals aren't readily in your orbit." Those ideals came to him in the form of an encounter with the Declaration of Independence and its profession of equality and inalienable rights. He found his way to America and Harvard Law, reveling in the civil order that he found nothing short of marvelous while rediscovering the Islam of his birth in its tolerant mode, not the "brutal theocracy" that interpreted the religion back home. Khan, in short, charts the nuanced evolution of an American patriot, one whose son was killed by a car bomb while serving as an Army officer in Iraq. Capt. Humayan Saqib Muazzam Khan was proclaimed a hero and posthumously earned the Bronze Star and Purple Heart for bravery in combat, to which his father characteristically adds a small wrinkle: "My son was dead because he was trying to make sure a stranger wasn't killed by mistake. He stayed true to the shape of his heart." So, it seems, did the father, who became an earnest critic of Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign, berating him for his anti-immigrant agitation and his penchant for "stirring the worst of human nature." All those credentials, of course, explain why Khan was asked to speak at the Democratic National Convention, introduced by his son's hero, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and elevated to national attention in the bargain. Self-effacing, the author writes movingly of the events leading up to that moment, which he feared, correctly, might expose him to direct attack on the part of Trump himself. Khan's aspirational memoir reminds us all why Americans should welcome newcomers from all lands.
COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
March 5, 2018
Khan, a Pakistani-American immigrant whose 2016 Democratic National Convention speech condemned Donald Trump for his treatment of Muslim Americans, reveals more about his family, including the life and death of his son Humayun, a U.S. army captain killed in Iraq. Khan’s voice is steady throughout the book, though there are moments—not only when describing the death of his son, but also early on when recounting his sorrow at being separated from his parents as a boy, or the joy of first discovering the U.S. Constitution—when he is audibly overcome by emotion. (That’s true for listeners as well; many will be hard-pressed to get to the end of this beautiful memoir without crying.) There are also unexpected moments of wry humor throughout, and Khan proves himself to have a skill for comic timing, like when he quips, “There had been no sexual revolution in Pakistan,” after describing his cluelessness at how to court the woman whom he would eventually marry. This moving memoir is made all the more powerful when heard in the voice of the author. A Random House hardcover.
September 15, 2017
As a young law student in a small Pakistani city, Khan, a son of farmers, had already been smitten by the principles of the U.S. Constitution. But even he could never have imagined that his moment in the limelight would come when he openly challenged presidential candidate Donald Trump about his proposed Muslim ban at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Khan's wide-eyed and eloquent memoir traces his family's history from the subcontinent to American citizenship and the tragic loss of his son, Captain Humayun Khan, in Iraq. A sense of wonder about America's promise peppers the entire narrative, even as he recounts his early struggles in the country while supporting his wife and three boys. Khan's rose-colored glasses occasionally camouflage the harsher aspects of the immigrant narrative. So while he hints at wife Ghazala's loneliness, especially after their son's death, his memoir is focused on one sunny goal: the Khan family's enthusiastic embrace of the American dream. This account is especially resonant now that we know where the family moved after their loss: Charlottesville, Virginia.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Much attention will be paid to this memoir by the Muslim American Gold Star father who galvanized the country at the 2016 Democratic National Convention.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)
October 15, 2017
Khan, the Gold Star father who spoke at the 2016 Democratic Convention, recounts his childhood as the oldest son of Pakistani farmers, as well as the courtship of his wife, Ghazala. As a student, he discovered the U.S. Declaration of Independence and the language of equality inspired him. He and Ghazala emigrated to the United States and raised three children. Their son Humayun joined the army in 1997, while still a student at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. When the Iraq War began in 2003, Humayun was given a tour of duty. He was killed by shrapnel in an explosion in 2004; his bravery earned him a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star. As the highest-ranking Pakistani American to die in Iraq and the first University of Virginia student to die in combat since Vietnam, his death garnered attention. Khan is successful in evoking the warmth of his son and the sincerity of his patriotism, as well as providing an even-handed and thoughtful rendering of the Muslim immigrant experience. VERDICT Khan's depiction of his family's loss serves as a poignant reminder of what military families sacrifice in service to their country, which the Khans have done with exemplary stoicism and grace.--Barrie Olmstead, Sacramento P.L.
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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