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Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World Kindle Edition
Winner of the Overseas Press Club of America’s Cornelius Ryan Award
A New York Times Notable Book
Named a Best Book of the Year by New York Magazine and The Progressive
In the wake of the September 11 attacks and the US-led invasion of Iraq, Suzy Hansen, who grew up in an insular conservative town in New Jersey, was enjoying early success as a journalist for a high-profile New York newspaper. Increasingly, though, the disconnect between the chaos of world events and the response at home took on pressing urgency for her. Seeking to understand the Muslim world that had been reduced to scaremongering headlines, she moved to Istanbul.
She arrived with romantic ideas about a mythical city perched between East and West, and with a naïve sense of the Islamic world beyond. Over the course of her many years of living in Turkey and traveling in Greece, Egypt, Afghanistan, and Iran, she learned a great deal about these countries and their cultures and histories and politics. But the greatest, most unsettling surprise would be what she learned about her own country—and herself, an American abroad in the era of American decline. It would take leaving her home to discover what she came to think of as the two Americas: the country and its people, and the experience of American power around the world. She came to understand that anti-Americanism is not a violent pathology. It is, Hansen writes, “a broken heart . . . a one-hundred-year-old relationship.”
Blending memoir, journalism, and history, and deeply attuned to the voices of those she met on her travels, Notes on a Foreign Country is a moving reflection on America’s place in the world. It is a powerful journey of self-discovery and revelation—a profound reckoning with what it means to be American in a moment of grave national and global turmoil.
“Her fascinating insider’s view of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s rise upends Western simplicities.” —The Atlantic
“Vividly captures the disorientation we experience when our preconceived notions collide with uncomfortable discoveries . . . Rare and refreshing.” —The Washington Post
“A deeply honest and brave portrait of an individual sensibility reckoning with her country’s violent role in the world.” —The New York Times Book Review
“A fluid amalgam of memoir, journalism and political critique—and a very readable challenge to American exceptionalism.” —The Financial Times

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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Deeply honest and brave . . . A sincere and intelligent act of self-questioning . . . Hansen is doing something both rare and necessary." ―Hisham Matar, The New York Times Book Review (cover)
"A piercingly honest critique of the unexamined white American life." ―The New Yorker
"Informed by deep reading in the history of U.S. foreign policy . . . At a time when our wrenching politics have turned our gaze on ourselves, [Hansen's] book is a necessary tonic." ―Christian Lorentzen, New York Magazine
"Searching and searing . . . [Suzy Hansen] combines a brisk history of America’s anguished intervention in the region; artful reporting on how citizens in Turkey and its neighbors view the United States today; and unsparing self-reflection to explain how she, an Ivy League-educated journalist, could be so ignorant of the extent of her country’s role in remaking the post-World War II world . . . Notes on a Foreign Country is a testament to one journalist’s courage in digging deep within herself to understand the real story and to make sure she gets it right." ―Barbara Spindel, The Christian Science Monitor
"[Hansen] asks probing and difficult questions that left me ruminating about their significance in our current political climate . . . An insightful read for any American who is, has been, or will be living abroad . . . Hansen’s book serves as a call to serious reflection and action for white Americans, even, and perhaps especially, the liberal, well traveled, and well intentioned." ―Rebecca Barr, Los Angeles Review of Books
"Compelling . . . [Hansen] vividly captures the disorientation we experience when our preconceived notions collide with uncomfortable discoveries . . . Rare and refreshing . . . Hansen's principal injunction to Americans to understand how others view them and their country's policies is timely and urgent." ―Ali Wyne, The Washington Post
"Hansen turns a coming-of-age travelogue into a geopolitical memoir of sorts, without sacrificing personal urgency in the process . . . Her long stay in Istanbul (she’s still there) gives her an outsider’s vantage on myopic American arrogance that is bracing. And her fascinating insider’s view of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s rise upends Western simplicities . . . The experience is contagious." ―Ann Hulbert, The Atlantic
"A kind of absolution and redemption for one thoughtful and sensitive US citizen . . . conducted by an insightful writer with remarkable powers of observation." ―Kaya Genç, The New York Review of Books
"A fluid amalgam of memoir, journalism and political critique ― and a very readable challenge to American exceptionalism." ―Alice Troy-Donovan, The Financial Times
"Extraordinary . . . This is a beautiful, angry, sad piece of writing that every American should read as we try to live in a world that has long known things about us that we are only now coming to understand." ―Ruth Conniff, The Progressive
"Ardent, often lovely . . . If Noam Chomsky could write like this, Hansen's work would already be done." ―Karl Vick, TIME
"It would be difficult for an American reader not to feel changed by this book. By framing the history of American imperialism within her own journey from innocence to knowledge, Hansen serves as a guide to whom we all can easily relate." ―Andrew Wessels, Los Angeles Review of Books
"Hansen’s sustained self-criticism indicts the white American system itself and, in the process, does the field of journalism a great service with her humility, introspection, and willingness to defy the establishment line." ―Belén Fernández, Jacobin
"Crucial and powerful . . . A keen and penetrating meditation on the decline of the United States . . . Downright prophetic." ―Ryne Clos, Spectrum Culture
"Sobering yet hopeful . . . Written with compassion and a deep thirst for justice, this book is a must for anyone struggling to make sense of the rapidly changing times we live in." ―Jeannine M. Pitas, America
"Eloquent and impassioned . . . Hansen leaves us with the fervent hope that Americans can reconnect us to the rest of humanity." ―Tom Zelman, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Fascinating . . . Hansen artfully conveys her own initial lack of awareness of the world, and her realization that she had internalized American exceptionalism into her own identity." ―The National Book Review
“Hansen’s must-read book makes the argument that Americans, specifically white Americans, are decades overdue in examining and accepting their country’s imperial identity . . . Hansen builds her winning argument by combining personal examination and observation with geopolitical history lessons. She is a fearless patriot, and this is a book for the brave.” ―Emily Dziuban, Booklist (starred review)
“Lucid, reflective, probing, and poetic, Hansen’s book is also a searing critique of the ugly depths of American ignorance, made more dangerous because the declining U.S. imperial system coincides with decay at home. The book is a revelatory indictment of American policy both domestic and foreign, made gripping by Hansen’s confident . . . distillation of complicated historical processes and her detailed, evocative descriptions of places, people, and experiences most American audiences can’t imagine.” ―Publishers Weekly (starred and boxed review)
“To be an American is of itself, George Santayana once wrote, a moral condition and education. Notes on a Foreign Country embraces this fate with a unique blend of passionate honesty, coruscating insight, and tenderness. A book of extraordinary power, it achieves something very rare: it opens up new ways of thinking and feeling.” ―Pankaj Mishra, author of Age of Anger
“Suzy Hansen’s Notes on a Foreign Country is an essential, compelling read of an American woman’s coming of age and her experience abroad. Hansen describes how her own narrative of the United States’ role in geopolitics began to unravel only once she stepped out of her insular life in New York and into the unfamiliar world of Istanbul. With colorful anecdotes, observations, and telling interviews, Hansen seamlessly weaves together the complex fabric of Turkish society, and with that presents a fresh look at the United States and the perceptions abroad of its foreign policy and of its people.” ―Lynsey Addario, photographer and the
author of It’s What I Do
“It is rare to come across an American writer who has moved through the world―especially the Islamic world―with the acute self-awareness and thoughtfulness of Suzy Hansen. She has deftly blended memoir, reportage, and history to produce a book of great beauty and intellectual rigor. Everybody interested in America and the Middle East must read it.” ―Basharat Peer, author of A Question of Order
“Notes On a Foreign Country is at once a kaleidoscopic look at modern Turkey, a meditation on American identity in an age of American decline, and a gripping intellectual bildungsroman. I’m in awe of this wise, coruscating book.” ―Michelle Goldberg, author of The Goddess Pose
“It’s really quite simple: if you have any interest at all in how the non-Western world views America and Americans, you must read Suzy Hansen’s beautifully composed memoir Notes on a Foreign Country. And when America’s leaders complain―while campaigning and in office―that there is “great hatred” for the U.S. (and that they want to get to the bottom of it), it should be required reading by government officials―all the way to the Oval Office.” ―Hooman Majd, author of The Ayatollah Begs to Differ
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Notes on a Foreign Country
An American Abroad in a Post-American World
By Suzy HansenFarrar, Straus and Giroux
Copyright © 2017 Suzy HansenAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-374-28004-8
Contents
Title Page,Copyright Notice,
Dedication,
Epigraphs,
Introduction,
1. First Time East: Turkey,
2. Finding Engin: Turkey,
3. A Cold War Mind: America and the World,
4. Benevolent Interventions: Greece and Turkey,
5. Money and Military Coups: The Arab World and Turkey,
6. Little Americas: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Turkey,
7. American Dreams: America, Iran, and Turkey,
Epilogue,
Notes,
Acknowledgments,
Index,
A Note About the Author,
Copyright,
CHAPTER 1
FIRST TIME EAST: TURKEY
Never again could she think there was but one narrative and that this narrative belonged only to herself, that she might create her own tiny little happiness and live safely within it.
— KIRAN DESAI
OVER TIME I CAME TO REGARD the view of Istanbul from an airplane with a sense of claustrophobia. The red-roofed buildings sprawled across the entire visible landscape, as if created with digital magic for a sci-fi film. It was so incomprehensibly enormous, a planet city. I would search with rising panic for where this endless concrete would finally be broken by the natural earth: the Black Sea, the Marmara, the elegantly slithering Bosphorus, a patch of forest with its tree heads bowed against the siege. Istanbul was bigger than the country, as Turks liked to say; it ate everythingin its path, and over time its appetite would grow monstrous. But that first day in 2007, I looked down at Istanbul with nothing but admiration, the gentle surprise of the Western tourist who hadn't suspected the world had gone on without her. From my seat, the tankers waiting to enter the Bosphorus strait looked as if they were waiting to be admitted to the center of the world.
The Istanbul airport was modern and efficient, European, and what struck me first was how foreign it did not feel, at least not in the way I expected, which was to somehow be older looking than the decrepit airport in New York I had just left. The metal walls gleamed, porters stood at the ready, there was a Starbucks. Sliding doors beyond the luggage carousels opened like a curtain to a stage where an audience of expectant faces, mostly men with dark facial hair, lunged forward, eager to snatch their waddling grandmothers and lead them safely from the crowds. The room felt almost hushed, an obedience to order that I didn't yet understand. It was the airport of a stable country.
My sleek taxi swept past buildings whose architectural style resembled some strange combination of Florida housing developments and European suburbs, shopping malls as familiar as those I frequented in New Jersey. I never had fantasies about an exotic Orient, but I had not expected globalization to have seeped like heavy liquid into every corner of the earth. The roads were immaculate, tulips lined the drive, and everywhere billboards proclaimed hopeful new construction as if in some 1950s American film reel: the next promised land! As the car merged off the highway, I glimpsed the Sea of Marmara, glinting around those huge shipping tankers. The road then curved around the edge of the old city peninsula, ahead of which I finally saw the miraculous geography of greater Istanbul — three separate pieces of multicolored cityscape emerging from the middle of a bright blue sea. A storybook stone tower stood above a huddle of buildings cascading down a hill to the Bosphorus, which had a delicately webbed bridge spun over it, leading to — Asia? The closeness of the two continents seemed improbable, hopeful, as if the world was not so big and estranged after all; old white ferries scuttled back and forth like beetles dutifully carrying messages between the two lands. Seagulls cawed overhead — to me, the soundtrack of my Atlantic Ocean imposed on an Asian metropolis — and swooped down on tiny rowboats pegged to the shore. I could not believe how beautiful it all was, how it was exactly what I had wished for.
The apartment I eventually moved into was more than a hundred years old and had no heat and broken windows, but it was located in what I had imagined an Istanbul neighborhood would be: decaying but beautiful turn-of-the-century buildings and narrow planked stone streets, men loitering in doorways and smoking. Galata was on the European side of the city, once populated by Jews and Armenians and Greeks and now home to squatting Kurdish families and foreigners, its grandeur corroded and gritty. In my apartment, the shower sprayed straight into the bathroom, the kitchen was covered in dust, and the lobby was terrifyingly dark, but from the small balcony I could see the Hagia Sophia framed perfectly between two buildings, so I thought I was the luckiest person in the world. My new home was called the Sükran Apartmani, or the Gratitude Apartments.
I knew only one person in the city, an American woman who was writing a book about Armenian-Turkish relations. After I unloaded my luggage, I dazedly followed her to meet a Kurdish PhD student named Caner so we could eat künefe in a shop that sold only künefe. Istanbul, in some heavenly seeming economic phase between the old world and early capitalism, still had shops that only did one thing: sell eggs, bake simit (the Turkish bagel), or make künefe, a syrupy dessert Turks felt no guilt making with both melted butter and cheese. Sometimes these shops were nothing but an oven and a couple of tables on a concrete floor, but their employees stood around staring at their customers vigilantly, delivered their desserts with the pride and confidence of an artist. Turkish hospitality was not obsequious; to the contrary, they were the ones in control. It had the curious effect of making you feel beholden to them even as they catered to you, the illusion of a relationship formed. These daily interactions went a long way, and for a long time, toward allowing me to pretend I was not lonely.
Caner and my American friend were continuing some conversation they had begun days before, and I watched Caner with the carefulness of a scientist. He was soft-spoken and serious, and he could roll his cigarettes gracefully without his eyes leaving your face. Earlier that day, the military had raided a "liberal" magazine called Nokta, which he told us about in asolemn tone, because it published some classified documents concerning the possible plotting of a military coup. A military coup was too fantastical a concept for me to take seriously; instead, I wondered when he said the magazine was "liberal" whether he had actually meant "radical." I still had the reflex that the police only went after bad people. Caner said that the military wasn't able to finish photocopying everything in one day, so they decided to complete their raid later. He seemed angry. I realized, with no small measure of surprise, that if you were a leftist in Turkey, your enemy was the military, not Islam.
After a while, I drew up the courage to try to impress Caner with my scattered knowledge of Turkey's political situation. I asked him about the outgoing president's assertion, in so many words, that Turkey was dangerously close to falling into the hands of radical Islam, which was the parlance of the time. The Turkish president was your standard secular Middle Eastern politician, the kind constantly warning about Islam, it seemed, in order to scare people. The only thing that stood a chance against the ideological purposefulness of Islamic political parties was the ideological purposefulness of being anti-Islam. The secularists talked about Islam more than anyone else.
"Do you think he actually believes that Turkey will fall into the hands of radical Islam?" I said, spitting out clichés with confidence. "Or is he just saying that to win votes for his party?" Caner was looking at me as if I were insane. "Belief?" he said. "Belief is not about facts. Belief is about a political position." This seemed to both answer and not answer the question. Was he on to me? Could he tell what I was really asking was: Is Turkey falling into the hands of radical Islam? At the time, in 2007, this was all anyone wanted to know. Caner looked as if "radical Islam" was the last thing on his mind. I longed for him to say more, but I was quiet.
Caner was Kurdish, as well as Alevi, a branch of Islam considered heretical by many members of the dominant Sunni sect in Turkey. It was great luck that he was the first person I met in Turkey, the prism through which I slowly tried to understand its politics, because as a member of two outcast minorities, he had no particular love for either the Islamists or secularists, this party or that party. He thought everyone was terrible. He was able to see things more clearly, without passion, without ideology, and consequently without much hope. And bleak as that was, he was a constant reminder to try to think that way, to avoid the traps of one's own bias. I would find it very hard to do.
The following day, he took me to get a cheap secondhand cell phone and an illegitimate SIM card — to this day I am not sure why but the expedition added to my already exaggerated idea of Turkey as an early-stage capitalist country — and we walked across the Galata Bridge, the low-hanging expanse over the Golden Horn that connected European Beyoglu, my neighborhood, to the old Ottoman city. I had heard that men fished off it — this being one of the most common romantic images of Istanbul — but that first day, it shocked me to see so many of them dangling rods and lethal hooks so close to what was a chaotic pedestrian walkway.
"Caner," I said. "Do they need a permit to fish off the bridge?" "Permit?" He again looked at me as if I were insane. "Do … the fish have permits to swim?"
His question delighted me out of all proportion to its content. To look at the world from a new perspective is to feel as if the ropes holding you to the earth have been cut. Caner was going on, laughing, remembering how once a friend of his asked why we called fish "seafood," when that would make humans "landfood." "Don't confuse freedom with happiness," someone said to me in those years. But inside my mind I was reconstituting meanings the way Caner did with words. No one with the same set of constructs I had was watching me, and I had the space to look at everything so differently that I actually felt as if my brain were breathing. In fact, I felt like a child.
* * *
ORHAN PAMUK MADE Istanbul's hüzün famous — a fallen-empire melancholy and loss that suffused the city and its people — but Istanbul, at first, was far too beautiful for me to see evidence of rot. Those first days my leg muscles became sore from walking up and down Istanbul's steep hills over and over, trying to memorize it all for an impossible mental map. I was in love, as if I had been living in an upside-down world and suddenly someone had turned everything right-side up. Unlike New York, where buildings blocked the sky, Istanbul from the grand wide lens of its hilltops made you feel bigger, undiminished and uplifted. Down on the narrow streets, close-up, everything seemed to happen in miniature, like on a movie set, and therefore appeared incomparably more human-size: the peasant woman emerged from her shop sweeping; a man pulled his cart of old broken things; a tiny boy trailed after his father; at night a man peed into the doorway; ladies hobbled slowly, one foot, then the other, side to side; men smoked on stools outside hardware stores; antique furniture piled up outside rickety houses; a peddler sold eggs as if from a concession stand. Head scarves bobbed through the crowds like buoys. Rather than some Islamic menace, they seemed like turn-of-the-century Edith Wharton characters in souped-up bonnets. Covered women looked perfectly normal, here, where they lived, carrying grocery bags, walking to work, far away from the theoretical world in which I had imagined them. The impact of merely seeing foreign things with my own eyes was the equivalent of reading a thousand history books. I found that I was watching life more carefully, that every nerve was alive to my environment.
I didn't speak the language, so those first months I lived in a state of white noise and visual bliss. I was forced to look, and to see. In fact, the first time I would return to New York after a year in Istanbul, twelve months of gazing at the Bosphorus, I took a subway over the Manhattan Bridge and it was as if I saw the water in New York for the first time. It wasn't that I noticed its relative homeliness compared to the Bosphorus; it was that I had never actually looked at it. In Istanbul, I ran down every evening to a dusty parking lot where the attendants sipped tea and watched the sun slip behind the minarets and into the Golden Horn: Topkapi Palace, the Blue Mosque, the Galata Tower, the mouth of the Bosphorus. You could see everything from there, but it was just a parking lot, whose inhabitants were three attendants, a cat lady and her ten cats, and three stray dogs. "Come, sit down," the parking lot attendant would say, offering me tea. I stood and watched the sun disappear behind the old city, its red glare thrown across the Bosphorus, transforming the windows of the Asian side into a thousand copper fires. The stray dogs cuddled in the dirt together and howled when the mosque began its call to prayer. In New York such property would be worth millions of dollars and bought up for condos. I'd read somewhere that the Byzantines believed that everyone, rich and poor, deserved a home with a view of the Bosphorus, rather than that it was the exclusive property of a wealthy few. Everything in Turkey seemed antithetical to where I came from.
The real poor, whose ramshackle houses I could sometimes spot lodged into the hill crevices, had arrived in Istanbul during the great global migration to cities that began in the 1950s, by the village-load. Entire towns from Anatolia would claim a patch of land — whether at the open city edges or jammed in between the mansions — and quickly assemble their concrete and tin shelters so that they couldn't be evicted; they put facts on the ground. The slums of Istanbul were called gecekondu, which meant "built overnight," and Istanbul politicians, walking that peculiar line between wily and humane, hurried to promise their new potential constituents electricity and water, knowing that such amenities would win them votes. Regardless of intention, they let them stay. I rarely saw homeless people in Istanbul, and slums never looked nearly as bad as they did in photos of Rio or Nairobi, and even this seemed to me proof of the Turks' enduring humanity. I was the exact opposite of the Americans I'd met my first night in town, who complained about the food, the taxi drivers, the fact that no Turks spoke English. I loved everything, operating in a state of constant emotional genuflection before this secret society that had let me in.
Up the Bosphorus, in the northern villages, there were Ferrari dealerships and ice-cream-cone mansions stacked up steep hills. The Bosphorus looked like some celebrity vacation retreat, like Lake Como. It had the air of exclusivity and endless leisure. Women sat outside for hours at sidewalk tables, all exhausting shades of blond, their thin frames weighed down by Marc Jacobs or Gucci bags. Where did they get all this money? How did they make it? (I had only ever been as far east as Sarajevo.) I looked out the taxi window in Istanbul with a sudden sinking feeling I couldn't put my finger on until years later. Like many of my reactions in those days, this one was embarrassing: it was as if it had never occurred to me that Turkey could be so rich. I would not have thought it could look like this: better than us. I had been invested in an idea of the East's inferiority without even knowing it, and its comparative extraordinariness shook my own self-belief. This was perhaps, too, my first sense of America's decline, and I felt it take me down with it, as if America's shabbiness said something about myself or, worse, as if Turkey's success said something about myself. Was this the same sense of failure Americans had felt when but a handful of men breached American borders and brought the towers down, their power somehow stronger than ours? Was this where American rage came from?
My own rage, a petulant kind of shame-rage, would emerge in Turkish class. My first days of lessons were a disaster of soul-shattering proportions. I had been good at languages in school in that way Americans are — to prepare for tests but never to actually speak them — and had barely glanced at a Turkish textbook before my plane landed, a light perusal of which would have informed me that Turkish was the Ironman of languages, one that shared almost no words with English, and worse, whose sentence structure was the reverse of ours. Unlike an American's first experience of, say, Italian or Arabic, Turkish was not some liberation of the tongue. Turkish felt like a purposely designed obstacle course, all the g's and k's stuck in odd places, as if the founders of the Turkish Republic, who reformed Ottoman Turkish into a new language for a new nation, wanted foreigners to know their place. Well, I knew mine. I couldn't say the words. I couldn't even hear them. My mouth felt slow and stupid; my tongue a flabby, inflexible thing. When I left my language class the first day, I felt a surprising kind of pain, like when you are teased on the playground. I had been instantly rendered the hapless American of stereotype and scorn.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Notes on a Foreign Country by Suzy Hansen. Copyright © 2017 Suzy Hansen. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B01NCZ6KCK
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux (July 2, 2024)
- Publication date : July 2, 2024
- Language : English
- File size : 3.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 274 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #148,423 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
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Customers find the book eye-opening and insightful, describing it as a tour de force that everyone should read. Moreover, the writing quality receives positive feedback, with one customer noting how the author paints pictures with words. Additionally, customers appreciate the book's realism. However, the pacing receives mixed reactions, with one customer finding it unpleasant to face the qualities discussed.
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Customers find the book eye-opening and insightful, describing it as a tour de force that everyone should read.
"...read a number of books by American expatriates, and this one, in its substance, its intelligence, and its writing quality, stands above all the rest...." Read more
"...to read this book because Suzy Hansen is one of the very best reporters working on Turkey...." Read more
"...My experience here has been completely eye opening - and so has reading this book. Long story short and in no particular order: 1...." Read more
"...Both are worth reading...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, finding it well-crafted and easy to read, with one customer noting how the author paints vivid pictures with words.
"...I also enjoyed her frequent nods to other writers, especially James Baldwin, who not only inspired her quest to discover America from the outside,..." Read more
"...34;Notes" is - on the whole - well written if a little disjointed organizationally and one would be hardpressed to read five pages without..." Read more
"...I am very glad I did. Ms. Hansen is a first rate writer who paints pictures with words...." Read more
"...on carrying forward the spirit of that most passionate and visionary American writer, James Baldwin." Read more
Customers appreciate the realism of the book, with one describing it as a stellar reflection and another noting the author's willingness to reflect.
"...way Suzy wrote it - with sensitivity, open-mindedness, and a willingness to reflect and engage in a deeply needed reckoning...." Read more
"Reflective, sincere, expansive..." Read more
"A stellar reflection on America's role in the world..." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book unpleasant, with one customer describing it as bitter and condescending.
"...Bitter, one-sided conclusions, invariably having listened to and conceded to non-Americans her country of origin's many perceived faults, denial,..." Read more
"...Hard truth, unpleasant to face the qualities we recognize as our own, yet a very important book for anybody who considers himself/herself a realist...." Read more
"...She is ridiculously condescending to everyone except herself, and acts like she has done all Americans a big favor by teaching them about..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2018I am convinced that only American expatriates who have lived for an extended period abroad are able to see the United States of America for what it really is: an empire, and not necessarily a benign one. This realization comes gradually, one surprise at a time, as the American abroad first encounters an odd disconnect between other people's friendliness toward Americans and a deep resentment, if not hatred, toward the USA. Asked for an explanation, you learn history that no one ever learns in US schools, of American interference in the affairs of other countries, in almost every case with toxic, destabilizing effect. You question whether the so-called "Land of the Free" and "Greatest Nation on Earth Ever in History" is rather a voracious, hegemonic wolf in democratic sheep's clothing. Not just since Trump, but since Woodrow Wilson. Many long-term expats like myself refer to this new understanding as our "OMG moment".
Suzy Hansen writes a sensitive, literate, often bitter account of her own awakening to the realities of America's role in the modern world. Her eye-opening encounters since first moving to Turkey inspired a determination to understand America from the view of local people throughout the Middle East. In the process, she uncovers little-known (in America) history which clarifies what the USA has done, and bungled, in the name of fighting communism and terrorism. How did the USA interfere in post-war Greece, Turkey, Egypt, and Iran--not to mention Iraq and Afghanistan--leaving behind a dangerous mess in every case? Her dispassionate historical briefs will change your view of America.
One of the most surprising revelations is evidence that the University of Iowa's Writer's Workshop, the grandmommy and most prestigious of all Writing MFA programs in the USA, was established partly as a CIA-connected effort to use art to discourage political thought in America, by specifically promoting a lyrical navel-gazing style of literature which characterizes much of post-war American fiction even until today, and away from the kind of literature which confronts political and societal issues like their counterparts in Europe were and are writing. Ouch! (says this MFA graduate)
The book is not an angry agenda-filled diatribe (like my review is). It is thoughtful, factual, a blend of memoir, field journalism, and history. You can feel the rage simmering beneath, but she always keeps it in check, preferring to state her case and let the reader decide on the emotional response.
I also enjoyed her frequent nods to other writers, especially James Baldwin, who not only inspired her quest to discover America from the outside, but whose words add weight to her own findings.
As she states in the Author's Note, Hansen had set out to write a book about Turkey but instead wrote one about the United States of America. My one quibble with the book is that this shows. There are two or three places in which she sidetracks a little bit too much into the intricacies of contemporary Turkish politics. But these are over with after 4 or 5 pages, leaving the rest of the book a sparkling gem.
On top of it all, Hansen is a terrific writer. I've read a number of books by American expatriates, and this one, in its substance, its intelligence, and its writing quality, stands above all the rest. Strongly recommended to all Americans. Read this book and open your eyes!
- Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2018As a historian of Turkey, I was excited to read this book because Suzy Hansen is one of the very best reporters working on Turkey. I found this volume to be thrilling and disappointing by turns. Although there are certainly insights regarding Turkey (and other locales, both foreign and domestic), the work is, at its core, about America and Americans rather than foreigners. In it, Hansen struggles with "American Empire" and her own sense of American innocence.... the incongruity between the damage that the United States has done, at home and abroad, and its own sense of "specialness."
"Notes" is - on the whole - well written if a little disjointed organizationally and one would be hardpressed to read five pages without coming across a striking insight. It is a serious and, in many ways, profound book. At the same time, as historian of the very issues that she addresses, I found her treatment of American empire somewhat shallow and her discussion of "modernity" oddly uncomplicated. In the end, however, Hansen is a moralist. She approached her time abroad as a moralist wanting to find out what was wrong with other countries and came to be a moralist writing about what was wrong with her own. This is not a great work of analysis, but that is not where Hansen lives intellectually.
This is a powerful written and felt volume. It isn't in the end a great work of analysis, but the moral questions and the cultural concerns she raises are profound nonetheless
- Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2017I chose to read this as I have been living and working in the Middles East for the last 2 years. Prior to coming here I was somewhat nervous - and really had no idea what to expect. I knew enough to understand that how the area was portrayed by our media was not going to be completely accurate - but beyond that - did not know what to expect. My experience here has been completely eye opening - and so has reading this book. Long story short and in no particular order:
1. We owe it to future generations to document and teach our history INCLUSIVE of all actions - good and bad - that we as a country have done around the world. Further to this - there should be an accounting of the outcome of these actions to those they have impacted.
2. You would not tell your neighbor how to run their home - we need to take the same consideration with neighboring countries. Our way of doing things - way of living - way of dressing - way of eating is not right - it is not wrong - it is just our way. It works for us at home in USA - just as other countries local cultures and ways of doing things work for them.
3. While we (USA) as a country do a lot right - we also do a lot wrong. We need to be willing to learn from best practices used by other countries around the world.
4. Does most of what we do as a country come down to capitalist interest - and ensuring we can sell our goods all over the globe? I live in the heart of the middle east - and today I have had a Betty Crocker cookie, coffee from Starbucks, Nestle Pure Life water and a Pepsi. For lunch, I had the local version of KFC - and while waiting for my order - saw on the pressure cooker an American flag. Further to this - I conduct my search on Google, and use my iPhone to chat...Was our fear of communism as a country a fear that it's growth would hold back our commercial interest?
This book speaks a lot about the multiple and botched attempts at regime change we have forced countries through around the world. In my 40 or so years being around - one thing that has been constant in USA though is our structured ability to have internal regime change through our democratic process. Every 4 years - should we feel we are not headed in the right direction - for whatever reason we can vote in change.
Top reviews from other countries
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in Canada on June 12, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent read
Best book I have read this year. Addresses American identity, American imperialism, race relations and attitudes toward the word with pleasant self-awareness.
- Lans hinn FróðiReviewed in Germany on December 8, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Recent international history interwoven with a story of personal enlightenment
A candid, probing meditation on one's contingent identity, an identity that, although contingent, almost necessarily creates illusions that have real-life consequences.
- bettyparryReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 8, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars SHE WAS AN AMERICAN GIRL RAISED ON PROMISES.
INTRODUCTION.
If you are confused every time you see foreigners burning an American flag in some far-off land, shouting “why are you hated all over the world”, then you need to read this book. This goes into some depth by an American journalist who lived abroad for years and came to realize why. A constant theme throughout the book is her growing respect for James Baldwin’s writings as she learnt about herself and foreign countries. She starts off with a coal mine disaster in Turkey where 301 are killed. The author uses this as a stepping off point whereby she learns about the US influence on Turkey and her own false consciousness.
Hansen works for New York Times magazine and spends her time abroad running around the Middle East, wherever the story is. However she spends most of her time in Istanbul where she loves and still lives today. “as a journalist I’d go to Turkey, or Greece, or Egypt, or Afghanistan and someone would tell me of our shared history of which I knew nothing…met with a response that spanned 60 years. And if I didn’t know this history, then what kind of story did I plan to tell?”
Chapter 1 FIRST TIME EAST:TURKEY. She talks of how Attaturk after WW1 tried to modernize Turkey and he became god-like in the country. She learns that since 9/11 Americans see exotic countries/Muslims as potential terrorists and all need to be like the USA ie. free and similar. She starts to realize that this is ridiculous due to their different religions and cultures. “I had been approaching Turkey as some specimen I could place under a microscope. This process was inherently hostile but I didn’t know it at the time”.
CHAPTER 2 FINDING ENGIN :TURKEY. She makes a very good friend in Rana in Istanbul. “Rana said to me, can’t you see that for my whole life so much has been defined by America? It was an American world, with American made international laws, American wars on her borders, American military bases on her soil, American movies in her theatres, American songs on her radio, American monetary exchange rates, American economic policies, American style marriage proposals, and 4 whole pages devoted to American news in Turkey papers. I had not been conscious of all what my country had done to get to that place of dominance, whilst for Turks that domination meant so much”. All this starts the author on a path of looking at her own country and its racist 2 caste system. Engin was a famous actor who had been a close friend of J Baldwin who had lived there for many years. He helps her along the path from ignorance to some start of understanding. Hansen then starts researching how the US had interfered in other countries via the CIA and lists 13 countries from Argentina to Vietnam.
CHAPTER 3 A COLD WAR MIND. AMERICA AND THE WORLD. “Without Baldwin I may never have begun to see America in Istanbul or Turkey itself. What Baldwin’s books did was to make me doubt my own assumptions…I had not known that mags, plays, books, writing progs, papers,-even hotels- had all been produced to shape my sense of America’s greatness, then what sort of individuality did I actually posses? And did I possess any at all? CHAPTER 4. BENEVOLENT INTERVENTIONS: GREECE AND TURKEY. “Thomas Mann in his diary said that he was convinced that what was happening in Greece under the Americans was worse than Czechoslovakia under the Soviets”….the Greeks were suffering from a financial crisis wrought by the West, and a refugee crisis brought on by the wars of the West….George Polk, an American journalist, wrote against the Truman Doctrine. His reporting undermined American aid to Greece and threatened America’s collaboration with the Greek government…his body washed up in Thessalonika Bay. Some 50 years later it emerged that he was killed most likely by Greek thugs hired by the Greek regime, covered up by with the assistance of the American embassy staff, high-ranking embassy officials and even American journalists… in late 40s Greece was flooded with US :advisors, soldiers, teachers, spies, businessman, diplomats, and agronomists….in Latin America the Americans would go on to stage or support 6 more military coups…it had become a habit yet one that did not quench American desire for global power…to write about Greece in 2010 as a basket case of its own making was an abnegation of responsibility and even accuracy, and to belittle it as such without awareness of the political intervention and military coup my own country instigated, was to be disrespectfully disconnected from my own subjects and indeed from my own country”.
CHAPTER5. MONEY AND MILITARY COUPS: THE ARAB WORLD AND TURKEY. She goes to Egypt in 2011 after the revolution with Mubarek now in power. “now in power but a corrupt dictator who tortures and loots but accepts America’s military aid…Egypt in a terrible economic state even though it received more American aid than any country after Israel..time and again the Americans saw nationalism as support for Moscow not an assertion of independence..through its myriad aid agencies and NGOs, America administered an insidious form of empire, its blind support for Israel, its propping up of dictators, its brutal economic policies, its stunning carelessness with Arab lives…1 thing everybody had in common –Isis guys, M Bro guys, liberals, guards, officers, is that they all hated Americans.
LITTLE AMERICAS: AFGHANISTAN, PAKISTAN AND TURKEY. CHAPTER 6. “In the post 9/11 years, the US spent $67b on civilian-aid programs in Iraq and Afghanistan but Afghans like Sayed knew that much of this money went to Americans’ own companies…they sensed to distract from the more awful truth America’s killing eliminated no enemies,-it killed people and created more enemies…we claimed we wanted to understand the Afghans, what we wanted to understand was ourselves. The greatest existential threat to Americans was admitting that the Afghans would be better off without them.” CHAPTER 7. AMERICAN DREAMS:AMERICA, IRAN AND TURKEY. “It was hardly understood the real fears of Iranians at the time was that the US, the most powerful country in the world, would simply not allow a political system to develop that didn’t mirror its own”. She gets pneumonia in US and finds its health system horrendous. She says she would have been much better off in Turkey cos of the American dollar. Hansen then researches the Iranian health system and finds it many times better than the US one. Mossadegh was the democratically elected leader of Iran in the 50s but overthrown by the CIA and MI6. The Shah of Iran came to power, “and became one of US closest allies…Iranians knew that SAVAK, the brutal secret police service, which employed as many as 60,000 agents, as well as millions of informants, and was known for spectacular acts of torture and violence, had been trained by the CIA….people disappeared without a trace…to the Iranians, modernity had meant Americans on their soil, billions of dollars in weapons, dictatorship and poverty, the SAVAK torture museum….corrupt rulers, and brutal US intervention in the affairs of small, weaker countries…we cannot go abroad as Americans in the 21Century and not realize that the main thing that has been terrorizing us for the last 16yrs is our own ignorance-our blindness and subsequent discovery of all the people on whom the empire-that-was-not-an-empire had been constructed without our attention or concern”.
EPILOGUE. July 2016 whilst in Istanbul the coup takes place against Erdogan. ….3 million Syrian refugees now lived in Turkey…Athens which I visited twice in 2015, had become similarly deluged with refugees….the 2 countries had become the dumping grounds for all the broken products of that century…when I moved here in 2007, many Turks told me that if America would invade Iraq in the careless, groundless manner it did in 2003, then there was no reason to think Turkey wouldn’t be next. This was the reality people lived in…sovereignty..much of the rest of the world still feels they must guard against it with their lives…. Months later Trump became president of the US and my country too seemed to collapse…I knew Trump supporters, I had them in my family…Trump voters had been told a lie, that they were the best, that their birthright was progress and prosperity and the admiration of the world..i blamed the country for his election as it was a country built on rhetoric and actions of white supremacy…built on the presupposition that the US was and should be the most powerful country on the planet…they sensed the slow draining of that power from their own hands, US began to break…Americans had been bound to myth not history…it is common to say Watergate shattered American innocence, then Vietnam did, then September 11 did, then Trump did but American innocence never dies….what fully shattered was my faith in my own objectivity, as a journalist or as a human being…it’s perhaps an ethical duty to consider our American dreams may have come at the expense of a million other destinies”.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. "Mary Mount listened patiently to me every time i came out of Istanbul. I wanted to write a book about Turkey. Mary said your book is about America."
Professor Robert Reich said in September 2020, "no other developed nation has nearly the inequities found in the US, even though all have been exposed to the same globalization and technological change. Jeff Bezos's net worth has recently reached $200bn, and Elon MUsk's $100bn even though 30 million households reported that they didn't have enough food. America's richest 1% now own half the value of the stock market, and the richest 10% own 92% of it.
- Edward M. SedgwickReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 24, 2019
4.0 out of 5 stars It is more about America than Turkey
Here is a young American woman travelling and living in a foreign country, Turkey. She looks back whence she came and no longer recognises the America she saw when at home. From Turkey, it looks different, menacing and evil.
She writes with perception and depth and gives us a new look at America in the modern world with some understanding of enigmatic Turkey.
Donald Trump would not approve of the contents.
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MinsimaiReviewed in Germany on October 22, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Read!
This book is, imo, a "must read" for every American....it's about the unpeeling of the propoganda most Americans grow up believing about their country--particularly white American's---something so hard to shed even while overseas. But Ms. Hansen, a very perceptive and soul-searching journalist, gets to the core of these delusions in this account of her experience of living in Turkey for several years. She was met with many surprises, faced up to her own bigotry and assumptions, wrestled with her changing view of her homeland through the revelations she obtained by trying to look at the world through the eyes of those around her while researching Turkey's history as well as delving into her own assumptions and background. As someone who has lived overseas for many years, I could relate to so much of what she writes and found the depth of her analysis and soul-searching is impressive. Excellently written as well, wonderfully descriptive and never boring.