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Michelle Nouri

    Michelle Raghdee Nouri is an Italian journalist and author whose work delves into themes of identity, exile, and integration into Western society. Her writing draws from personal experiences of fleeing Iraq and her subsequent life in Italy, offering readers a raw and poignant exploration of finding home and belonging. Nouri masterfully weaves autobiographical elements with a profound examination of cultural encounters and human resilience. Her literary style, characterized by keen introspection and evocative prose, provides readers with a compelling journey.

    The girl from Baghdad
    • The girl from Baghdad

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      The true story of a woman torn between two worlds. Michelle Nouri was born in Prague but grew up in vibrant pre-war Baghdad. Her privileged Iraqi childhood was like a fable; full of sun and games with her sisters and cousins in the crowded house of Bibi, matriarch of the powerful Nouri family. As a young girl, Michelle didn't fully understand the tensions between East and West that existed in her upbringing - Muslim ceremonies, Christian friends, Communist restrictions, private ballet classes and overseas trips. Her adolescence complicated things as family tradition dictated she should marry a cousin. She resisted - and instead found herself flirting with Uday Hussein, Saddam's eldest son. He invited her into a seductive world of tennis matches and moonlit concerts. But then, without warning, her privileged world imploded. The idyllic city of her childhood was devastated by war, and her father deserted his family to take a second wife. Michelle, her mother and sisters were abandoned and left impoverished. In desperation, they fled to Czechoslovakia, and embarked on a painful and emotional journey between cultures - Arabic, Communist and Western.

      The girl from Baghdad