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Sand Queen by Helen Benedict
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Sand Queen by Helen Benedict
Paperback $17.00
Jul 31, 2012 | ISBN 9781616951849

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  • $17.00

    Jul 31, 2012 | ISBN 9781616951849

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

Praise for Sand Queen

“This is The Things They Carried for women in Iraq . . . feels right and true.”
The Boston Globe

“Every war eventually yields works of art which transcend politics and history and illuminate our shared humanity. Helen Benedict’s brilliant new novel has done just that with this century’s American war in Iraq. Sand Queen is an important book by one our finest literary artists.”
—Robert Olen Butler

“Benedict interviewed around 40 female veterans of the war in Iraq to tell this completely heartbreaking, vivid story of the particular difficulties of being not just a soldier, but a female soldier.”
—Bustle

“One of this year’s best new novels about war.”
—NPR, To the Best of Our Knowledge

“[A] thrilling and thoughtful new novel . . . [Kate] is a character readers won’t soon forget.”
Publishers Weekly

“Funny, shocking, painful, and, at times, deeply disturbing, Sand Queen takes readers beyond the news and onto the battlefield.”
Booklist

“This bleak novel explores the horrendous impact of the Iraq war on women, both soldiers and civilians . . . [an] unforgettable testament.”
Kirkus Reviews

“An eye-opening glimpse into a life that many Americans have never seen.”
Library Journal

“Told in compellingly vivid detail with the clear ring of truth every step of the way.”
The Free Lance-Star

“If you missed out on serving in the Iraq War, you can, if you’re willing, be catapulted right into the midst of some of its more challenging moments courtesy of Ms. Benedict’s gutsy prose. Her interviews with over 40 female veterans show up as action flow and dialogue in Sand Queen, a novel that will leave you deeply unsettled if not shaken to the root of your being.”
The Herald-Dispatch

“Every war eventually yields works of art which transcend politics and history and illuminate our shared humanity. Helen Benedict’s brilliant new novel has done just that with this century’s American war in Iraq. Sand Queen is an important book by one our finest literary artists.”
—Robert Olen Butler 

“Helen Benedict’s compelling story provides an intimate picture of what it means to be a soldier, what it’s like to live on the battlefield, and what the ethical choices are that our troops have had to make in Iraq. Benedict tells her story from two perspectives—that of a young American woman—a soldier—and a young Iraqi woman—a medical student—both of whose worlds are ravaged by the war. At times funny, at times grimly painful, Sand Queen offers a new chapter in contemporary American history.”
—Roxana Robinson, author of Cost and Sweetwater

“Every American who claims to value the lives of our soldiers should read this powerful, harrowing, and revelatory novel.”
—Valerie Martin, author of The Ghost of Mary Celeste

“Ms. Benedict pulls off this audacious gambit because she is an exceptional writer and storyteller. Her gritty depiction of a soldier’s life in the Iraq desert is particularly well done. Sand Queen is powerful precisely because Helen Benedict is so pissed off.”
New York Journal of Books

“A convincing and affecting portrait of two resilient young women caught up in war.”
—Shelf Awareness

“In writing what might be the first major woman’s war story and alternating points of view between opposing sides, Columbia professor Helen Benedict has created something enormously fresh and immediate on this sadly ancient topic.”
—Chronogram.com



Praise for the work of Helen Benedict

“A stunning chronicle of abuses suffered by women enlisted in the U.S. Army and serving in Iraq.”
Los Angeles Times

“Benedict, an author of both fiction and nonfiction (Sailor’s Wife; Virgin or Vamp), offers distinctive cross-cultural insights as well as a cadre of satiric and fascinating characters, and the result is a story that is both touching and humorous. Highly recommended.”Library Journal
 
“Benedict offers an engaging, lush portrait of envy, desire, and the insatiable lure of the exotic and unknown.”
Booklist
 
“An armchair traveler’s delight, Benedict’s novel is an amusingly poignant look at the British abroad in the spirit of Evelyn Waugh.”
Publishers Weekly

“A comedy of bad manners reminiscent of Evelyn Waugh.”
New York Daily News

“Benedict has written a novel lush with exoticism yet rooted, finally, in the common experience of what it is to love.”
Women’s Review of Books

“[The Edge of Eden] reads as though it could have been written in the early 20th century, right alongside of the work of Evelyn Waugh and W. Somerset Maugham . . . [a] dangerous, mesmerizing tale.”
Cleveland Plain-Dealer

“The Lonely Soldier is an important book, a crucial accounting of the shameful war on women who gave their bodies, lives and souls for their country.”
─Eve Ensler, author of The Vagina Monologues

 
“A beautifully written novel by a most entertaining and accomplished writer . . . compelling, intelligent, insightful.”
—Oscar Hijuelos, author of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love

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