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Cathleen Miller

    Cathleen Miller is a nonfiction writer who uses individual stories to illuminate broader global issues. Her work, which has taken her around the world interviewing everyone from diplomats to survivors of sexual violence, connects personal experiences with political context. Through her precise storytelling, she reveals complex human journeys and their links to worldwide concerns. Her impactful biographies of notable women emphasize how personal narratives reflect the global order, demonstrating that the personal is indeed political.

    Cathleen Miller
    Desert Flower
    • 2013

      Desert Flower

      • 369 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      4.2(42364)Add rating

      Waris Dirie (the name means desert flower) lives a double life - by day she is a famous model and UN spokeswoman on women's rights in Africa, at night she dreams of her native Somalia. Waris, one of 12 children, was born into a traditional family of desert nomads in East Africa. She remembers her early childhood as carefree- racing camels and moving on with her family to the next grazing spot - until it came her turn to meet the old woman who administered the ancient custom imposed on most Somalian girls: circumcision. Waris suffered this torture when she was just five years old. Then, aged 12, when her father attempted to arrange a marriage with a 60 year old stranger in exchange for five camels - she took flight. After an extraordinary escape through the dangerous desert she made her way to London and worked as a maid for the Somalian ambassador until that family returned home. Penniless and speaking little English, she became a janitor in McDonalds where she was famously discovered by a fashion photographer. Her story is a truly inspirational and extraordinary self-portrait of a remarkable woman whose spirit is as breathtaking as her beauty.

      Desert Flower