Red Sky Over Kabul: A Memoir of a Father and Son in Afghanistan

Availability :
In Stock
₹ 439.12 M.R.P.:₹ 499 You Save: ₹59.88  (12.00% OFF)
  (Inclusive of all taxes)
₹ 0.00 Delivery charge
Author: Baryalai Popalzai and Kevin McLean
Publisher: Speaking Tiger
Edition: 5-Jul-23
ISBN-13: 9789354475191
Publishing year: 5-Jul-23
No of pages: 288
Book binding: Paperback

"Baryalai Popalzai was born in Kabul, Afghanistan in 1952. After the Russian invasion in 1980, he fled the country and eventually settled in San Diego. When the Taliban were ousted in 2002, Bar returned to Kabul for the first time in twenty years and has been returning a few times every year since then. Kevin McLean received his JD from Boston University School of Law and practised law for many yars in Boston and San Diego. He is the author of Crossing the River Kabul (2017)."

<p>"Red Sky Over Kabul is the deeply personal, moving and dramatic story of a royal Pashtun family—the Popalzais—intimately connected with Afghanistan’s history from the 1800s. After the Soviet invasion in 1980, the narrator, Baryalai—Bar—is forced to leave his beloved country as National Security guards carry out a house-to-house search for young men who refuse to fight for the Russians against their fellow Afghans. He flees to Pakistan, where he is imprisoned as a spy, eventually making his way to the US, to make a new life for himself. He returns twenty years later, to reclaim his family homes in Kabul and Jalalabad, only to find them occupied by drug dealers and warlords.</p><p>This memoir is as much a story of Bar as it is a story of Afghanistan: Bar’s father, Rahman, was tutor to Zahir Shah, who would become the last king of the country after the assassination of his father in 1933; Rahman Popalzai continued to serve Zahir as his advisor and confidant for 40 years. At the heart of this book is the relationship between a father and son—Rahman and Bar— who share a fierce love for their homeland, but whose paths diverge.</p><p>Red Sky Over Kabul is also a vivid portrait of a vanished Afghanistan—a world of kite flying, duck hunting and sitar lessons; a world lost to unending, horrific violence. But even in loss and tragedy, the human spirit finds hope and resilience—which is Afghanistan’s triumph, as it is Bar’s."</p>