Vanishing Girl of Kabul

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A01=Zahra Joya
A02=Amie Ferris-Rotman
activism
afghan war
afghanistan
asylum seeker
Author_Amie Ferris-Rotman
Author_Zahra Joya
Category=DNBH1
Category=DNC
courage
current affairs
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
feminist
finding my way
forthcoming
hope
kabul
lyse doucet
malala
memoir
middle east
poignant
political refugee
politics
powerful
taliban
US invasion
women's rights

Product details

  • ISBN 9781408783641
  • Dimensions: 156 x 240mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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'A memoir that doubles as a warning. Zahra Joya writes for the women the world abandoned to the Taliban's brutal gender apartheid - and refuses to let us forget them... [she] is one of the bravest journalists of our time' Malala Yousafzai

'Beautifully written and powerfully told. Joya's story will leave you angry, but also awed that in this painful history there's still profound hope. An impressive memoir of a truly inspiring individual'
Lyse Doucet, author of The Finest Hotel in Kabul

'A brave and beautiful book which touches the soul, the heart and the mind'
Sandi Toksvig

'Joya writes with great insight and compassion about Afghanistan's girls and women. This book is a unique and compelling account of refusing to be silenced or erased. It is about extraordinary courage and refusing to submit to oppression. Above all it is about hope and optimism, and one woman's fight for freedom'
Sir Laurie Bristow, Former British ambassador to Afghanistan

A powerful and poignant memoir about growing up female in Afghanistan, being betrayed by a world that promised to protect women's rights and how these rights are under threat across the world.

When the Taliban first ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s, Zahra Joya disguised herself as a boy simply to attend school. After the US-led invasion, her world transformed. Education, opportunity and freedom flourished. Like many Afghans, Zahra dared to believe in a future. She became a journalist and established her own media company to tell the stories of Afghan women.

Then, in 2021, the Taliban returned. Decades of hard-won progress vanished overnight. Women were erased from public life once again, and the promises made by the West collapsed into silence.

The Vanishing Girl of Kabul is Zahra's powerful story of betrayal, survival and resistance. Co-written with award-winning journalist, Amie Ferris-Rotman, a longtime friend of both Zahra and Afghanistan, this book blends the intimacy of memoir with the urgency of investigative reporting, exposing the brutal realities of gender-based oppression - not only in Afghanistan, but around the world.

Now living in exile in London, Zahra refuses to be silent. This book is her clarion call, a warning to a world too willing to look away.

Zahra Joya is an Afghan journalist now exiled in London, and is the founder of Rukhshana Media, one of Afghanistan's first news agencies dedicated to women's stories. Joya and her team continue reporting under immense danger. Her courageous journalism has earned global recognition, including the Foreign Press 2022 Award, Louis M. Lyons Award, Goalkeepers Changemaker 2022 and Marie Colvin Award. She was named as TIME Woman of the Year in 2022, was among BBC's 100 Women and was honoured with Spain's Llibertat d'Expressio 2022 award. She is a Fellow at Hughes Hall, Cambridge. Amie Ferris-Rotman is a British-American journalist and global news editor at New Lines Magazine in London. She has covered Afghan refugees and the war in Ukraine for TIME, spent nearly a decade in Russia as a Reuters and Washington Post correspondent, and exposed abuses against Kazakh women in Chinese camps. A former Reuters senior correspondent in Afghanistan, she founded Sahar Speaks, empowering Afghan female journalists, earning the British Press Award for Innovation (2016). A Stanford JSK Fellow, she holds degrees in Russian Studies and serves on Rukhshana Media's board.

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