Beirut is not a typical destination for a young Australian couple embarking on their first year of married life. But when Catherine Taylor and her husband begin work as foreign correspondents based in the Middle East they decide to set up home in this ravaged city. Catherine soon falls in love with the Paris of the Middle East and becomes intrigued by the complexity of its peole: their exuberance and warmth, and Beirut's vibrant Mediterranean lifestyle, seem to starkly contrast with the dark tales she has heard of violence and hatred. As Catherine's work takes her across the region, from conflict on the West Bank to war in Iraq, a world behond the cliched descriptions on the nightly news gradually opens up.
A journalist's exploration into the Middle East... Catherine Taylor, an Australian journalist, recounts the four years she spent living and working in Beirut, covering politics in the Middle East. Not knowing all that much about the Middle East, I found her stories of people she met and her discovering life in Beirut really quite fascinating. During the four years she spent there, she travelled to Gaza, covered the war in Iraq, spent some time in Egypt covering a women's boxing championship, discovered and enjoyed life in Lebanon, and dug into the life of Hezbollah fighters.
Her personal feelings and thoughts on living in the Middle East as a Western woman are nicely balanced with, sometimes heartwrenching, stories of people she encountered and/or formed deep friendships with.
Makes me want to read more about the Middle East, travel there and discover it myself, and try some of the awesome food she describes!! :)
A fascinating read, as I do like to hear about cultures different to my own, and some of the stories shared by the residents of Lebanon are quite heartbreaking. The only problem is that it does drag towards the end, and just when things get interesting again (that is, when Taylor returns to Beirut when war has broken out again) it is dealt with quite quickly and not in as much detail as we have been subjected to previously.
Being a journalist by trade can be both a help and a hindrance in writing personal stories and especially an entire book rather than a collection of stories. Catherine has written a moving, evocative and highly readable memoir of her time living in Beirut with her foreign correspondent husband. Coming fresh off Charmian Clift's marvellous memoir of her Greek life with her journalist husband (seeing a pattern here...?), the standard was set high. This isn't the beautiful chaos that Charmian and George lived in but it's absolutely relevant now and will be always, I suspect. The intermingling of superficial obsessions with jewellery, glamourous hair, perfect makeup and visage alongside poverty, violence, orthodox religious practices is common to all cities. The fact that devastation has truly visited upon Turkey and Syria now and this is a window into daily life before the utter carnage that developed makes it an eminently timely read. For the wanderlust, the journalist, the passionate writer and seeker of human stories and experience...read Catherine's book and keenly await her next adventure.
This is a great read. It is a memoir of sorts - for a brief time in her life when she lived in Beirut. It is good to have some idea of what it is like for people living in this tortured but eerily romantic city.
I have to say I just couldn't get into this book, much and all as I wanted to. When I read a memoir, I want to get to know the author, but in this memoir I felt the author remained distant.