Wow. I'm still reeling a bit from what this woman has gone through. First of all, her memoir is extremely well told. I was expected a lot of telling, no showing and was pleasantly surprised to find myself hooked from the get go. She tells her story well, keeps the reader hooked, educates as well as entertains.
Feels kinda wrong to be entertained by a memoir such as this. The book starts in Lebanon.. Nada comes from an abusive household. Her parents considered her and her sisters worthless.. didn't even celebrate their birthdays. They doted on her brother, gave him the better food, paid for his education, held the girls down so he could beat them. Yea, shocking stuff.
Nada doesn't dwell on that overly long though. Soon she is finding a way to escape to the U.S. where she finds "not all Americans were on drugs or in a constant state of drunkenness" after all. (LOL!!! That made me laugh.) There's a sham marriage, her family coming and taking over, her break from them, another marriage, obtaining a job with the FBI and finally having a "family" within that organization, an organization that later betrayed her.
She talks about Pan Am flight 73 hijacking. Though she went on a bit too much about this, I found it fascinating. Having been a child in the 90s, I wasn't aware of this history. Shocking stuff. She also talks about a murder case. Then she moves on to the CIA...takes covert missions until her pregnancy hinders the investigation.. and just wow. I'm gonna stop there.
The anthrax on the plane.... OH MY. I was biting a finger nail while reading that.
The books ends with her family again. Their mess, their accusations, their greed and hate got her in trouble with the FBI and CIA. Very sad and exciting story both. Well done. I think this woman could have a career as a writer if she never goes back to law enforcement.