However Tall the Mountain by Awista Ayub

Title: However Tall the Mountain
Author/website: Awista Ayub
231 pages
Publisher: Hyperion
Publication date: August ’09
Genre: Memoir
Would I recommend it: Yes
These young women have amazing stories. It showcases desire and determination. Every young girl should read this book. It will inspire them to reach for their dreams.
A group of Afghan girls are introduced to soccer American-style in this subtly composed, eye-opening tale of cultural clash and transformation. The author—the director of the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange whose own family emigrated from Kabul to Connecticut when the Soviet-backed coup took over the country in 1978—first sponsored eight Afghan girls to come to America to play soccer for six weeks in 2004. Having been grouped informally as a team only recently back in Afghanistan, where girls were rarely encouraged to play sports, the girls spent six weeks at soccer camps in America—in Washington, D.C.; Connecticut; and Cleveland—playing soccer publicly for the first time. Ayub’s account explores the diverse stories of the eight girls, who had lived through the recent nightmare era of the Taliban and in some cases were prohibited from attending school; excited and a little frightened by the attention they garnered in America, the eight girls ranging from 10 to 16 then had to return to their humble, war-town families with the hope they could use their newfound leadership skills to teach others.

This one is in my stacks and I’m really looking forward to reading it.