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Highlights
- Kabul; August 15, 2021.
- About the Author: Rebecca Blumenstein spent 22 years at THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, rising to Deputy Editor-in-Chief, before joining THE NEW YORK TIMES in 2017 as Deputy Managing Editor.
- 352 Pages
- History, Military
Description
Book Synopsis
Kabul; August 15, 2021. It was supposed to be Marwa's first day back at medical school. After more than a year of the pandemic's isolation, here, at last, was a cause for celebration. She set out her books and ironed the dress specially chosen for the occasion. But when she awoke that morning, giddy anticipation quickly gave way to panic and fear. The streets were thronged with desperate crowds, everyone pressing in the same direction. The Taliban were coming. They had only hours to get out. On the radio, an announcer intoned the names of the provinces that had already fallen. Marwa had gone to bed the night before with a vision of a whole future ahead of her. Now she had only minutes to pack, wondering how she could condense everything she'd ever known into a single backpack.
Efforts to evacuate the group were taking place as Rebecca Blumenstein was driving her son cross-country to college. As a top editor of THE NEW YORK TIMES and THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, she had been deeply involved in managing the foreign correspondents the paper sent to war zones. Now, as the lives of their Afghan Bureau employees and their families were imperiled by the Taliban's swift resurgence, she played a pivotal role in coordinating their evacuation, in the end securing the relocation from Afghanistan to the US of more than 200 people - the largest privately sponsored group of refugees in modern American history. She then led their resettlement into their new life in the U.S.
Though each is navigating different circumstances and dreams, these four brave, remarkable women are united in their desire to make the most of the opportunity they have been given. Stories of hope and resilience, setback and struggle, ambition and joy, THE LAST FREE WOMEN grapples with what America owes those who seek freedom on our shores, and how they, like generations of immigrants before them, will remake what it is to be American.
About the Author
Rebecca Blumenstein spent 22 years at THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, rising to Deputy Editor-in-Chief, before joining THE NEW YORK TIMES in 2017 as Deputy Managing Editor. She served as deputy editor, Publisher's Office, from February 2021 to May 2022, working closely with NEW YORK TIMES Publisher A.G. Sulzberger to support the paper's rapidly growing journalism operations. In 2023, she moved to NBC, where she is President, Editorial, of NBC News. She was named chair of the board of the Columbia Journalism Review in August 2022, and also serves on the board of the Wallace House/Center for Journalists at The University of Michigan and as a final judge of the Gerald Loeb Awards. She led the team that won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for international reporting and received the New York Newswomen's Award in 1993, the Gerald Loeb Award in 2003, and was named to the Aspen Institute's Henry Crown Fellowship for 2009. More information is available here: https: //www.nbcuniversal.com/leadership/rebecca-blumenstein.
Diana Kapp is a journalist who writes frequently about the intersection of women and modern culture, and has traveled in Afghanistan to report on the education of girls in the country's rural northern provinces. Her longform pieces have been published in THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE WASHINGTON POST, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, ELLE, MORE, THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, and MARIE CLAIRE, among other publications. She is the author of two YA books profiling female changemakers, GIRLS WHO RUN THE WORLD and GIRLS WHO GREEN THE WORLD. More information is available here: https: //dianakapp.com/