by G Willow Wilson (Author)
The Butterfly Mosque, journalist G. Willow Wilson's remarkable story of converting to Islam and falling in love with an Egyptian man in a volatile post-9/11 world, was praised as an eye-opening look at a misunderstood and often polarizing faith (Booklist) and a tremendously heartfelt, healing crosscultural fusion (Publishers Weekly).
Inspired by her experience during a college Islamic Studies course, Wilson, who was raised an atheist, decides to risk everything to convert to Islam and embark on a fated journey across continents and into an uncertain future. She settles in Cairo, where she attempts to submerge herself in a culture based on her adopted religion and where she meets Omar, a man with a mild resentment of the Western influences in his homeland. They begin a daring relationship that calls into question the very nature of family, belief, and tradition. Torn between the secular West and Muslim East, Wilson records her intensely personal struggle to forge a third culture that might accommodate her values without compromising them or the friends and family on both sides of the divide.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Published: 26 May 2011
ISBN 10: 0802145337
ISBN 13: 9780802145338
Captivating . . . [An] excellent memoir . . . [that] deserves attention; not just for the clarity of [Wilson's] style and her shrewd observations, but for her sincerity and courage in following her own truth. --The Globe and Mail
Eloquent . . . A life-altering adventure in love, faith, and surrender . . . [Wilson] wins the reader over with her courage, her keen intelligence, her insatiable hunger for truth, and her fine writing. It is riveting to watch a liberal, fiercely independent young American transform into a Muslim and an Egyptian daughter-in-law. . . . Much more than a coming-of-age story, Wilson's memoir explores expatriates and anti-Westernism, economics and fundamentalism, Egyptian culture and feminism . . . [and] builds a bridge between the East and the West through her writing. --Charlotte Observer
Wilson's book, particularly in these treacherous times of mistrust and paranoia, is a masterpiece of elegance and determination. . . . Wilson has written one of the most beautiful and believable narratives about finding closeness with God that makes even the most secular reader wince with pleasure for her. . . . A natural-born storyteller. --The Denver Post
Wilson skillfully conveys the terms of complex sociological discord. . . . Her careful examination and forthright wit make her an ideal ambassador to those who haven't . . . separated [Islam] from its attendant terrorist factions and stereotypes. . . . Wilson has the objective sensitivity to understand the attitudes and arguments facing her; she's multicultural, eloquent and humbly persuasive. And even better, she knows how to tell a great story. --Paste Magazine
Wilson's illuminating memoir offers keen insights into Islamic culture. . . . An eye-opening look at a misunderstood and often polarizing faith, Wilson's memoir is bound to spark discussion. --Booklist (starred review)
More than one skeptical reader was thoroughly won over by [Wilson's] lack of preachiness or self-righteousness. --Elle (Readers' Prize)
A gorgeously written memoir about what it means to be human in a fractured world, told with warmth and wit to spare. The Butterfly Mosque is a book that will stay with you for years. --Reza Aslan, author of No god but God and How to Win a Cosmic War
Satisfying and lyrical . . . [The Butterfly Mosque] proves a tremendously heartfelt, healing cross-cultural fusion. --Publishers Weekly
[An] honest and uplifting memoir . . . [that] embraces--not demonizes--both Muslims and the West as critical foundations for [Wilson's] spiritual journey. --The Huffington Post
Thoughtful . . . Wilson's gorgeously written, deeply felt memoir is more than a plea for understanding. It's also a love story and an exploration of life in a culture far removed from ours. . . . [The Butterfly Mosque] pulls aside the veil on a world many Americans judge based on thin, sometimes ugly, media stereotypes. Wilson's sincere love for her faith blooms on almost every page [and] that heartfelt desire to know The Other infuses the book with soul. --Boulder Daily Camera
Memoirs like Wilson's continue to be an important counterpoint to the tales of Mideast belligerence that fill the nightly news. --Winnipeg Free Press
Visit Willow's website at gwillowwilson.com