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I Have Iraq in My Shoe

Misadventures of a Soldier of Fashion

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"I am not moving to Iraq to teach."

How does a liberal American girl in red suede boots end up teaching English to conservative Muslim Iraqis in headscarves?

Gretchen Berg has met the recession: she has eaten cereal for dinner, given up the gym membership, and come face to face with looming unemployment. To cope, she decided to uproot her life and move to the Middle East. She expected to make some good money, pay off some bad debt, and take some photos of camels. She did not expect to feel at home. She did not expect to fall for a student. She did not expect Diet Coke withdrawal.

Irreverent, hilarious, and completely relevant, I Have Iraq in My Shoe takes a single, broke, fashion-conscious American female who prefers Project Runaway to CNN and tosses her into Iraq in exchange for cash and vacation time.

Watch the desert sand fly!

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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2012
      Surface-level, chick-lit-style memoir about the life of an English-language teacher in a small town in Iraq. Like many Americans, Berg was laid off during the recession. When a former friend, Warren, offered her a job as a foreign-language teacher in Iraq, she accepted, realizing that she could eliminate her $40,000 credit-card debt while earning an $80,000 tax-free salary. Moving to another country would also give her a shot at finding her soul mate. Early on readers will learn about the author's obsession with shoes, and eventually the extensive talk about footwear becomes tiresome and irrelevant, as does Berg's frequent references to Scarlett O'Hara. Life in Erbil, a sleepy town with limited entertainment options, was difficult. Even though the author tried a few local restaurants and shops, she was most happy when drinking Diet Coke and shopping for luxury shoes online. Berg constantly fought to preserve her privacy in her company villa, which was often threatened by visits of higher-ups who needed a place to stay for the night when doing business in Erbil. The author eventually found some happiness when she fell for one of her students, an attractive boy 15 years her junior. However, she became suspicious of his motives when she learned that he wanted to move to America and needed someone to sponsor him. Eventually her employer fell on hard times and Berg was laid off. Around the same time she had the revelation that the only things she liked about Iraq were those that reminded her of the United States. Even though she earned the praise of her students and Warren, the author's constant discussion of luxury goods overshadows any insights about her work as a teacher. There are a few funny stories and cultural observations (her discovery of virginity soap in the market), and her plan to repay her debt succeeded, but the shallow narrative could have used more pertinent observations about Iraq. More about the experience of a single professional American woman than about what life in Iraq has to offer an expat. Not recommended.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2012
      Facing impending unemployment and heavily in debt in the middle of one of the worst recessions in recent memory, Berg accepts an unusual jobteaching English in northern Iraq. An unabashed fashionista and no stranger to travel, she soon finds herself packing her many overweight bags for Iraq, or as she irreverently calls it, The Iraq. Beyond the normal adjustments of moving to a new country, Berg hilariously recounts her struggles to assimilate into a vastly different culture, one in which, as a single woman, her ability to move around without a male companion is severely limited. In the middle of dealing with a difficult boss and navigating the pitfalls of the expat community, Berg genuinely begins to enjoy living and teaching in Kurdistan. Her growing romantic attachment to one student presents a difficult dilemma. Can love truly conquer all, even culture? In the mixture of all these issues, Berg carves out a strong and caring community of students and friends while picking up a few new pairs of shoes along the way.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

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