Imagen del autor
4 Obras 236 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Salam Pax is currently living in Baghdad and is writing weekly syndicated articles for London's The Guardian newspaper

Incluye los nombres: Salam Pax, pseud Salam Pax

Créditos de la imagen: Facebook profile photo.

Obras de Salam Pax

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Pax, Salam
Nombre legal
al-Janabi, Salam
Otros nombres
Pax, Salam
Abdulmunem, Salam
Fecha de nacimiento
1973
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Iraq
Lugar de nacimiento
Bagdad, Iraq
Educación
University of Baghdad (Architecture)
City University London (Journalism)

Miembros

Reseñas

This was an interesting book. I think when I think of the blogs I frequent they tend to be on the more flippant variety of celebrity or fashion variety so it's good to have a reminder sometimes what type of less frivolous things can get be conveyed with the medium. Salam Pax was an internet blogger who became famous due to his input on his blog about Iraq pre, during and post the invasion. He's a 180 from what most people would think of the stereotypical Iraqi - for one he drops the names of 'Western' music into his blogs and in every regard he is a guy you could find anywhere in the world. It's not something you see portrayed very often.

The book was interesting purely from a sociological standpoint as you see how the knowledge that your country is going to be bombed at any moment and how that affects your everyday life and, more bizarrely how it doesn't affect your life. There are some dark moments stated in passing about seeing a man on the street without a leg after the grenade he was carrying went off, or how someone couldn't go out because there was part of a dead person on their lawn but these are balanced by lighter moments as well.

In my opinion it's not great but it's insightful and it's a wonderful thing to see how the world has moved on where, even in the middle of a warzone, we can still get internet coverage of what's going on. A blurb on the front cover says that it's similar to Anne Frank - I don't agree with it. With Anne Frank's diary we had an emotional connection with her and it was the little details - the complaining, the angst, the spoiled tantrums that we were never meant to see because they were in her diary that made her story so heartbreaking. Pax admits that people reading his blog, designed for public consumption, don't really know him - they see the side of him that he wants to portray and that's fine. Maybe that's the modernity of things - more facts, more access but less emotive.

… (más)
 
Denunciada
sunnycouger | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 20, 2013 |
Taken from the blog of Iraqi Salam Pax, from the days leading up to the U.S. invasion and those following. Salam is a great blogger, full of real feeling, ranting and commenting on life in Baghdad. This is a man who knows what Saddam Hussein is, but knows that the U.S. coming in as "liberators" is not the answer. A great fan of music, films, books, his entries are witty, funny as well as giving a rarely heard Iraqi perspective of what was happening.
½
 
Denunciada
soffitta1 | 2 reseñas más. | Oct 13, 2009 |

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Obras
4
Miembros
236
Popularidad
#95,935
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
11
Idiomas
6

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