Lyse Doucet is the BBC's Chief International Correspondent and a
senior presenter with BBC World News television and BBC World
Service radio. She is regularly deployed to present special news
coverage from the field and report across the BBC's domestic and
global outlets.
Lyse spent fifteen years as a BBC foreign correspondent with
postings in the Middle East, West Asia and West Africa. She has
been reporting from Afghanistan since 1988 when she lived in Kabul
and has been a frequent visitor ever since.
Lyse was nominated to the Order of Canada in 2018 and received an
OBE in the Queen's Honours list in 2014 for her services to
broadcasting.
Lucy Hannah specialises in setting up and delivering creative
initiatives. She is founder and director of Untold Narratives CIC.
She's also a Visiting Research Fellow at King's College, London,
and a Director of the BOCAS Lit Fest in Trinidad.
A precious collection of work, the first and maybe last of its
kind. My Pen Is the Wing of a Bird is a huge accomplishment
*author of THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH*
Powerful, profound and deeply moving, new fiction by Afghan women
writers will expand your mind and elevate your heart
*Elif Shafak*
No-one aware of the harrowing events currently playing out in
Afghanistan and, in particular, the catastrophic effect this has
had on the lives of women, can be unmoved by their plight. The risk
of womens' voices being lost and their freedoms eradicated is very
high. This book is like a little light shining into the lives of
women in Afghanistan. It's a beautiful read
*Jo Brand*
Sometimes, life is having beautiful dreams in a nightmare. The
authors of this book express their longing to escape a nightmare
and build a liveable world. A liveable world for everyone, but
especially for women at a time when their body and soul are being
destroyed
*President of PEN International*
Here we have stories of the everyday and extraordinary lives of
Afghan women, all of them written before the Taliban took power in
August 2021. Today, these women writers live under the harshest of
conditions, their everyday human rights, as women, revoked. This
book is a precious collection of work, the first and maybe last of
its kind. My Pen is the Wing of a Bird is a huge accomplishment
*Monique Roffey*
These are extraordinary and intense glimpses into a shuttered
world, written by women who have to struggle daily to make their
voices heard
*Lissa Evans*
If fiction offers a window into the world, this is a book of
stories you need to open
*Romesh Gunasekera*
[An] arresting collection . . . Each of the works in this
collection is written in simple, direct prose and offers vivid
snapshots of a country beset by war and violence, where misogyny is
rife but women continue to dream for a better future . . . The
women's extraordinary resilience is celebrated . . . It seems more
important than ever to read the work of these courageous
writers.
*Financial Times*
A gripping and important book told by the women whose voices need
to be heard
*Bella Magazine*
These stories show why the militants are wrong. They take their
readers into rooms at televisions cameras and journalists never
reach. In the process they reiterate how much Afghan women could
again say and do, if only they were allowed to.
*Economist*
The pandemic and the resumption of Taliban rule have made the
publication of My Pen Is the Wing of a Bird little short of a
miracle . . . [T]hese short tales draw insight and lyricism from
lives lived in the shadow of war, violence and relentless
misogyny
*Sydney Morning Herald*
Powerful in its impact and admirable in the quality of the
prose
*Guardian*
Revelatory . . . taken together [these stories] form a remarkable
portrait of lives largely invisible to readers outside Afghanistan.
This brims with humanity.
*Publishers Weekly*
Beautifully written and translated, these stories are gripping,
insightful, often shocking, intense and extraordinary
*The Lady*
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