| Reviews
of Princess |
People
"Absolutely riveting and profoundly
sad..." |
USA
Today
"Must reading for anyone interested in human
rights..." |
Publisher's
Weekly
"Another page turner" |
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Kirkus Reviews
"A fascinating look at the lifestyles of the
rich and Saudi."
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Oxford
Review
Fascinating...one is compelled to read just one
more page, one more chapter once one has started this
Arabian nightmare. |
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Book Jacket, Reviewed by Mahmoody, Betty
"Anyone
with the slightest interest in human rights will find
this book heartwrenching. It is a well-written personal
story that compels the reader to awareness of human
rights violations in Saudi Arabia and of the true role
designated to women by men, even in wealthy families, in
that country. The issues addressed by this admirably
courageous woman stay with the reader long after the
story is finished.
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Kirkus
Review
"A fascinating look at the lifestyles of the
rich and Saudi"
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500
Great Books by Women; review by Holly Smith
While living in Saudi Arabia, Jean Sasson
befriends a woman named Sultana. Sultana wants her life
to be known and she gives Jean her diaries and notes,
entrusting her to write her life story. Jean does,
changing names and places for Sultana's protection. The
result is a vivid depiction of the restrictions of Saudi
Arabian society and the raw, corrupt, and unquestionable
power of the royal males and religious leaders. Born
into the royal family in 1956, the independent Sultana
is the tenth daughter and the youngest of her mother's
living children. By age fifteen, Sultana has seen her
brother participate in the rape of an eight-year-old,
brought her seventeen-year-old sister home after an
attempted suicide because of her forced marriage to a
sadistic fifty-three-year-old man, and buried her
mother. Sultana marries, and at home she dresses as she
pleases and voices her opinions about the inequities she
lives, though usually her views are ignored. Outside her
home she must cover herself completely in black and is
expected to be subservient in every way. Talks with
Marci, her Filipino maid since birth, expose Sultana to
the countless wrongs suffered by foreign workers in
Saudi Arabia. Sultana's lifestyle - which includes four
homes, shopping trips to Europe, and gardens in the
desert - contrasts sharply with what she learns from
Marci and causes her further anguish and anger. Princess
is an intimate look at one woman's struggle against the
injustices of an extremely repressive society.
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Denise Perry
Donavin - BookList
Sasson was
asked by a friend, a member of the Saudi royal family,
to write this candid depiction of her life. Princess
Sultana (a pseudonym, although how her identity can be
kept secret when so many specific details of her life
are spelled out is a mystery) is a woman who since birth
has been surrounded by monumental wealth yet has lived
under barbaric socioreligious constraints. Many have
heard or read of the veils worn by Saudi women, their
arranged marriages, and even their executions for moral
missteps--such as being raped by family members.
Sasson's first-person narrative puts the whole
nightmarish experience into perspective. Sultana has
divulged how her existence as a female was disdained
from earliest childhood by her taunting brother and
contemptuous father. She spells out the horror stories
of her sister's forced marriage as the fourth wife of an
abusive older man, of a friend's lifetime confinement in
a dark attic room for falling in love with a westerner
while studying in London, of her sister's maiming
circumcision, and of countless other acts supposedly
justified by religious tradition but actually intended
to maintain male dominion over Saudi women. Throughout,
the princess's feisty spirit is the book's saving
feature. Her conniving and arrogant refusal to conform
to this system are marvelous yet heart-breaking to
behold. Human rights, not solely women's rights, are at
issue here.
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Hilary Mantel -
The Times Literary Supplement
The book has the flavour of stories told
behind the hand, at ladies' parties. These stories are
as reliable as anything can be, in a society where there
is no free press and rumour is the only currency. Sasson
omits--deliberately, I can only think--to show the
complex, divided attitudes of women in Islam. Saudi
women I met in my time in the Kingdom didn't believe
Western women were getting a better deal. They thought
they were martyrs, forced out to work,and made to work
(without servants!) in the home. . . . Jean Sasson's
professed wish that Princess 'will help dispel
the many negative stereotypes' held ofthe Kingdom is a
piece of hypocrisy to rival that of the pious Muslim
males who cut a swathe through the brothels of Bangkok.
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Library Journal
One must keep
in mind the context of time and place when reading this
emotional and exciting book to alleviate some of the
horror of the injustices endured by the women described
here. Equality of men and women has not worked out in
any society, but the status of women in Islam is more
problematic in that canon law is applied according to
the social climate. Consequently, countries influenced
by the West, such as Egypt, are more relaxed than
countries like Saudi Arabia that are ruled by strict
Hanbali law, which subjects women to unwelcome
marriages, execution at whim, and the boredom of purdah
. In this book, Sasson ( The Rape of Kuwait ,
Knightsbridge Pub. Co., 1991) tells the fascinating
story of ``Sultana,'' an unidentified Saudi princess who
yearns for recognition in her own right, not as an
adjunct of men. For those who wish to know more, Soraya
Altorki's Women in Saudi Arabia ( LJ 1/86) and Paryeen
Shaukat Ali's Status of Women in the Muslim World (Aziz
Pub., 1975. o.p.) are good. Recommended for popular
collections. (Illustrations not seen.) Previewed in
Prepub Alert, LJ 5/1/92.-- Louise Leonard, Univ. of
Florida Libs., Gainesville
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Publisher's
Weekly
In this
consistently gripping work, a Literary Guild alternate
selection in cloth, the American-born Sasson recounts
the life story of a Saudi princess she met while living
in Saudi Arabia, offering a glimpse of the appalling
conditions endured by even privileged women in the
Middle East. Photos. (Sept.)
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Booklist
Magazine
In a country where woman are still essentially
bought or bartered, the princess (real name withheld) is
justifiably fearful when the family realizes she is the
subject of the 1992 expos{‚}e, Princess: A True
Story of Life Behind the Veil in Saudi Arabia. If
this book has a thesis, it is a line the princess uses
to describe the troubles her own daughters are going
through as they try to assert themselves in the
male-dominated society: "When normal is forbidden,
people fall into the abnormal." With religious
police watching over their morals, one wonders just how
more "abnormal" these people and their country
can be. The answer: quite a bit. This book, both
fascinating and depressing, shows that women are much
less than second-class citizens in Saudi society. Brian
McCombie --This text refers to an out of print or
unavailable edition of this title.
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Kirkus Reviews ,
July 1, 1992
Sasson (The Rape of
Kuwait, 1991--not reviewed) brings us ``Sultana,'' a
pseudonymous member of the Saudi royal family whose memoir
documents the suffocating sexism that pervades Saudi life.
From minute one, Sultana got the message that only men
mattered. Her father had three wives in addition to her
mother; her brother, Ali, had sovereignty over his ten
sisters. Sultana, we learn, crafted constant rebellions,
from smashing Ali's Rolex to leaving his pornographic
slides--on which he'd printed his name--at the local
mosque for the religious police to find. Arranged
marriages were the norm: Sultana was lucky in being
matched with a liberal, distant cousin (she was also lucky
in being spared the common practice of ritual genital
mutilation). She had children, battled her husband, and
was thrilled during the Gulf War by reports of the 47
Saudi women who bucked the law and drove in the streets of
Riyadh (although rumors persist that one of the group was
put to death by her father). But Sasson's device of
telling Sultana's story in the first person trivializes
the princess's important material. Her voice echoes that
of a pulp-fiction heroine (``I was drowning in Kareem's
eyes...''), and the endless vignettes of her
feistiness--especially the incident of her brother's
pornography--verge on incredible. But when Sultana stops
talking about herself and takes time to observe, we get
amazing details: of Saudi wealth (British interior
decorators were imported to redo Sultana's suite on the
maternity ward), and of cultural brutality (one friend,
caught propositioning foreigners, was drowned by her
father in the family swimming pool; another, in punishment
for having an affair with a Westerner, was confined to a
darkened room for life). Worth paging past the trivial,
then, to absorb a chilling and enraging portrait of
women's absolute powerlessness in Saudi society. (Fifteen
b&w photos, maps--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1992,
Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This
text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of
this title.
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