Raj: I found this book apt for the times cause of the current situation in Afghanistan with the return of the Taliban. Afghanistan truly is very complicated and diverse and due to its geographic isolation will remain an enigma for the world for time to come.
Enjoyed reading this book.
India on May 15, 2022
anna g: I'm waiting for it to be downloaded on my Kindle
Canada on Nov 28, 2020
E Shipp: This is a pretty good history of modern Afghanistan from an Afghan perspective, which I bought because I only made it through a few pages of a history of Afghanistan written by a non Afghan before I was sick of the cliches. However, even though it does use plenty of citations, it’s written in more of a popular rather than a scholarly style and doesn’t include as much hard detail or go back as far in history as I would have liked. I have mixed feelings on when the author mentioned his own family history, because usually I don’t like it when historians insert themselves into the narrative, but this author came from a prominent family which was involved in or witnessed some historic moments, and the author also has a lot of personal anthropological and sociological knowledge which is interesting. But it still leaves me wanting a standard scholarly style book. Fortunately, the author cites or mentions several Afghan historians who seek to have written major works, so now thanks to this book I will look them up. Overall, I think this is a good history with a valuable perspective but it’s not fully scholarly and usable for citations like some other works are, so it’s not the...
United States on Dec 24, 2018
101mystic: It’s easy to forget that stories presented outside of a context usually have a political motive, and not one that is meant to explain things. This book goes far enough back to lay the ground work of the people and why things are presented to us in the formate they are.
Canada on Nov 23, 2018
Daydreamer: Many news reports that feature Afganistan have been appearing in the media for more years than i can remember. What is the problem? Why do statements made in the media by persons in authority - alway seem to be wrong? Afganistan is a mystery to me - so i bought this book because it was recommended by a friend. An explanation of how the Nation of Afganistan has evolved during the past two centuries are laid out by Ansary in a clear and readable manner. He describes the social structures of the Nation and the ways that internal and external forces have influenced or distorted the accepted ballance of power within the Country. The narrative is always interesting and well reasoned. I am now better informed. This time by an author who is an Afgan National writing about his own country with understanding. Recommended
United Kingdom on Jan 01, 2016
ramiro: History as its best. Very well written and explained. Very good to know a lot more about Afghanistan and its history from a different point of view.
Spain on Apr 19, 2015
gt surber: Review – Games without Rules: The often interrupted History of Afghanistan
“Games without Rules” by Tamin Ansary is 1) a history of the last three hundred years in Afghanistan, 2) an attempt to place Afghanistan in world history - at which it succeeds 3) a cultural analysis of Afghanistan looking at both the rural conservative Islamic side and the long chain of modernizing elites who variously attempted to rule Afghanistan and 4) a look at the many other countries who have tried to conquer or control Afghanistan in the last 200 years and 5) the personal memoir of a man, Tamin himself, who was born in Afghanistan near Kabul, who went to high school in Kabul and then to college in the United States on a “scholarship.” He is now an American Citizen who has traveled back to Afghanistan several times, who lectures and speaks and writes about Afghanistan. Tamin tells stories of how his family survived various cataclysms and radical changes of governments. Tamin describes the changes he has seen in the Afghanistan culture.
Tamin picks up the story in the time of Ahmad Khan Baba just before 1740. The Persians under Nadir Afshar fought their way from Iran cross...
United States on Aug 19, 2014
willearnest: The author writes in a very conversational, story-telling, style. It's an easy read, but difficult for me in another way. As an Army officer in the Vietnam era, it's difficult to read about the mistakes we've repeated, and the people we've tried to help, but harmed, yet again in an admittedly different time and place. I think the author's statement that Afghanistan is a twenty-first century culture overlaying a twelfth century culture is probably his key point. Afghanistan's location is probably always going to make it a place where great powers, of one form or another, will contend for influence. Sadly, Pakistan - another state that isn't a state but a place, created when the British abandoned the area - is increasingly feeling the consequences of its nurturing of the Taliban.
It's an engaging read by a knowledgeable author who has lived a good part of the recent history. Sad, but ultimately hopeful. Would that our leaders in the US would read this book and learn from it before we recreate another tragedy both in another place and here, ultimately, at home. The consequences of Vietnam on our own veterans are peaking now, forty years later. I shudder to think of what we'll...
United States on May 09, 2013
Uncovering Afghanistan's Troubled Past: A History of Interruptions and Games Without Rules | In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom and a New Life | "In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom" - A Memoir of Survival and Hope | |
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B2B Rating |
82
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98
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98
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Sale off | $4 OFF | $3 OFF | |
Total Reviews | 7 reviews | 993 reviews | 993 reviews |
ISBN-10 | 1610393198 | 014310974X | 1594206791 |
Central Asia History | Central Asia History | ||
Language | English | English | English |
Customer Reviews | 4.6/5 stars of 331 ratings | 4.8/5 stars of 26,557 ratings | 4.8/5 stars of 26,557 ratings |
Paperback | 417 pages | 288 pages | |
Best Sellers Rank | #97 in Central Asia History#673 in Asian Politics#786 in Middle Eastern Politics | #1 in North Korean History#1 in South Korean History#141 in Memoirs | #7 in North Korean History#85 in Women in History#1,419 in Memoirs |
Dimensions | 6.14 x 1.05 x 9.21 inches | 5.5 x 0.75 x 8.3 inches | 6.35 x 1 x 9.64 inches |
Asian Politics | Asian Politics | ||
ISBN-13 | 978-1610393195 | 978-0143109747 | 978-1594206795 |
Item Weight | 1.22 pounds | 10.4 ounces | 1.22 pounds |
Middle Eastern Politics | Middle Eastern Politics | ||
Publisher | Publicaffairs; Illustrated edition | Penguin Books; Reprint edition | Penguin Press; First Edition |
johnmurphy: Tamim Ansary, like Ali Ahmad Jalali, is a transplanted Afghan who--lucky for us--decided to make the USA his adopted home. And like Ali Ahmad Jalali, Tamim Ansary in Games Without Rules has penned a superb history of his native Afghanistan. It is a book which clearly traces Afghanistan's colorful and turbulent history from the founding of the Durrani Empire in 1747 by Ahmad Shah Durrani, "Ahmad Shah Baba," "the Father of Afghanistan, " up to recent times. Ansary writes with a breezy style that has a great amount of knowledge that is conveyed to the reader in a totally engaging way. More than any writer I have known, Tamim tells Afghanistan's story with a humanity that brings the people who made Afghan History to life as flesh-and-blood characters. Buy this fine book and read it--you will be very glad that you did. Happy reading, Professor John F. Murphy.
United States on Dec 21, 2023