Bangladesh Books


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Bangladesh Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Bangladesh
The Drum-Lime Migration
Published in Kindle Edition by Trafford Publishing (2006-07-06)
Author: MaryAnn and Jon
List price: $9.99
New price: $7.99

Average review score:

Its a novel of blood and tears
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-14
If I dislike this Novel for any reason then that reason is, it makes to hate the men of particular reason. But then I cannot avoid that. I know what the writers have narrated is true. I have read the incidents of murder, court presecution all in newspapers and seen some in TVs, How can those be wrong ? But the strangest thing is, I was moved when I went through the novel. The novel seems to say more than what I got in newspaper. Emran represents the enemy of mankind. He is the son of greediness, the 'quality' that turns man into animals. But then the novel is not the story of animals only. It is full of messages from men, men suffering from atrocities from another type of men. I no more think of the novel as story, it is the true picture of our society that initiated in India since Gautama Buddha.
Like millions of India I retained profound respect for Gautama Buddha. But after I went through thios novel and criticized all the writers wrote about Gautama, I became convincved the preaching he spread was wrong, utterly wrong that turned the Indians so weak as to surrender to enemies. If 'power' is the secrecy of survival in this world, what Gautama Buddha gave to the Inbdians was the secrecy of failure. That probably is the reason why his great faith vanished from this land so early. I urge upon the readers to go through this novel and to express their honest reactioins, whatever those might be.

I believe Indians are biased
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-13
I have seen only few Indians to write on line reviews. Most who wrote about this novel wrote very 'high'. I believe they are a bit biased since the writers are from their region.

True story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-06
When I read the stories of Mrs. Hillary (all lies) I wonder how the story of Drumlime Migration can be true. Well I have little doubt because from the newspapers I have already known the story. In Nidarabad, that man (A Muslim) killed all the members of a Hindu family to grab their land. They put the dead bodies in drum with lime and this way wanted to rell, they migrated to the neighboring couyntry. Are the people of this doing religion still doing it ? Is not the government doing anything about it ? Is the world community aware of such heinous things in this part of the world. I thank the writers for docuymenting such a sad and true story.

Let the Pakistanis reply
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-09
This novel describes about the Pakistani soldiers and Behari Rajakars on the Bengalees during liberation war and afterwards.
Can the Pakistais say, they did not do it ?
The question is for the Pakistanis and Beharis to reply.

It reveals their character
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-07
Has any Pakistani ever read this book ? They should, it reveals their character. It exposes when the people belongingb to one religion change to ferocious animsls when they change religion.
The UN should take up a program to find out if or how religions change the character of men. This they should do in the interest of the mankind, who are no more safe for one reason or the other. I feel for the people who were so brutally murdered for their religion, I know if there is any god, he would some day take action on the people belonging to this harmful religion. h

Bangladesh
The Price of a Dream: The Story of the Grameen Bank
Published in Paperback by University Of Chicago Press (1997-11-08)
Author: David Bornstein
List price: $25.00
New price: $9.94
Used price: $5.75

Average review score:

Fighting Poverty in the Trenches, One Borrower at a Time
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-18
More than just a casual pass through Bangladesh to investigate Grameen Bank, the micro-credit phenomenon started a quarter century ago by Muhammad Yunus, The Price of a Dream fills in gaps left by other writings. It puts a human face on the poor of this impoverished Asian country, formerly known as East Pakistan. It brings poverty-stricken Bangladeshis into your livingroom as factual, not fictional, folks.

"Aren't all Bangladeshis poor?" you ask. No. There is wealth. But there are also tens of millions of families so impoverished that one cannot begin to understand the depth and breadth of their deprivation without actually visiting this tropical nation or coming to know some of these people through a book such as this.

Bornstein writes in a painterly way. His stories, both sad and glad, weave a mesmerizing pattern of the richness of Bangladeshi life amid trying circumstances. How people cope, how they react to successes and disasters, how they work to pull themselves up economically and socially: every thread is pulled through the loom in due course to render a true and clear representation of lives on the ragged edge. Thanks to loans from Grameen, millions of families have been able to hem that edge, one stitch at a time, to finish off their piece of cloth.

For his part, Yunus, speaking as the economics professor he once was, declares, "Credit is a powerful weapon, and anyone possessing this weapon is certainly better equipped to maneuver the forces around him to his advantage." (p. 228)

Micro-credit empowers the unempowered. No one describes that process better than David Bornstein. The Price of a Dream will open your eyes to the possibility of minimizing the indignity of poverty in our lifetime, if not eliminate it altogether. Every beautiful tapestry starts with a single thread. Even if that first thread is mere hope, it's a worthy place to begin.

Great things from small beginnings
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-02
This is a great book & I recommend it to anyone interested in development in third world countries. Ought to find its way onto a few economics course booklists I hope. It does not offer a step by step guide on how to set up a system in your own country, just a generalised working. Not a big criticism, as that would be a subject for a less accessible, more technical book. For starters, this is it!

5 Stars
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-05
This is the best book Ive ever read. I'm an international banker of Banladeshi origin working for one of the worlds biggest bank. After reading this book I feel I want to quit my day job and work for Grameen and actually make a difference to the world by helping to eradicate world poverty.

David Bornstein has written the book beautifully.

Dr Yunus is a legend.... Respect to you sir

omar_rahim@hotmail.com

Engaging reading
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-11
Intended for an audience unfamiliar with micro-finance, this book offers an easily readable history of the Grameen Bank and the potential for loaning to poor women. Even though I have some background in the field, I still found it an interesting story. However, the author relied heavily on Grameen staff and translators and I felt that the level of analysis and criticism that would have been useful was lacking. It is more a journalistic story than an academic analysis of this institution.

A must read for microcredit enthusiasts
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-29
I've been reading a lot of books on microcredit/microfinance and this is very thorough; I would reccommend it for anyone interested in the industry and to those trying to duplicate Grameen's efforts in other areas. It gives you an indepth look at the Grameen Bank(it's successes, failures). It also gives you an opportunity to look at the bank from the perspective of the borrowers and the staff. All the stories aren't rosy and glamorous which makes this book a lot more balanced than what I've read in the past. The author gives you the room to create your own views on Grameen and microcredit(as a sustainable means to fight poverty). This was a great read!!

Bangladesh
Bangladesh (Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet Publications (1985-11)
Author: Jose Roleo Santiago
List price: $7.95
Used price: $2.56

Average review score:

DonĂ½t leave home without it
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-27
This is an essential guide for travel in Bangladesh. Like all the books in the Lonely Planet travel series, it begins with Facts about the Country, Facts for the Visitor, Getting There and Away, and Getting Around. Next comes a detailed description of Dhaka and the surrounding district, and then separate chapters for each of the major political and geographical divisions in Bangladesh.

Before traveling to Bangladesh, do take the time to read the Dos & Don'ts article in the Facts about the Country chapter. People in Bangladesh are generally friendly and polite, but they tend to be more friendly if you follow their rules for politeness. Men should give local women some distance, and even women should let other women approach them first. People who wear shorts in Bangladesh are risking at least their reputations, if not more. Going about in shorts in public would be akin to wearing a bikini bathing suit on Wall Street- -sure to gain a lot of unwanted attention. Western women will find themselves much more comfortable in local clothing, salwar kamis or saris as absolutely no woman wears Western clothing in Bangladesh. Women packing for a trip in Bangladesh might be better off packing no clothing at all, and just shopping for local clothing upon arrival because what they find in the local markets will be appropriate for both the climate and the culture. (That will also leave more room in your suitcase for gifts on the way in and souvenirs on the way out.)

Many educated people in Bangladesh speak English quite well. But the average person on the street doesn't, so take the time to study the useful expressions from Facts about the Country chapter when you get a chance. While you're at the airport waiting for departure, look around- -surely there's someone there who can help you with your pronunciation.

As for any travel in the developing world, make sure your immunizations are up to date before you go to Bangladesh. Hepatitis A vaccinations are highly recommended and get your travel doctor to write you a prescription for a full run of Cipro (strong antibiotic) to carry with you, and take plenty of rehydration packets. If you get seriously ill while in Bangladesh, it's better to try to get to Dr. Wahab's office (listed in the Dhaka section of this book), rather than the Cholera Hospital, as recommended elsewhere in the book.

As the book mentions, there's a lot to see in Dhaka. There's even more to see outside of Dhaka, where the air is better and the people are friendlier. A great way to get out of town is to book a tour with Prajatan or The Guide (info in the Dhaka chapter). We had a spectacular all-inclusive boat cruise through the Sunderbans with The Guide (Prajatan's boat had recently sunk). Don't miss shopping in the NGO handicraft stores, particularly Aarong (info in the Dhaka chapter).

As with any guidebook, the info for specific hotels and eateries tends to change between the time the authors visited and publication, but the historic sites and regional highlights will always be there. Read this book over several times before you go, and you will be ready as ever to start your adventure.

Nice work!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-17
This is the best lonelyplanet guide book I've ever had. Normally, I find them OK but irritating. Miraculously, this one is different.
Firstly, it's not too big (unlike, say, the Indian one) and is not afraid to leave some good stuff OUT. Secondly, it's very well researched, which is impressive in Bangladesh because information isn't all that readily available. Nor is it patronising in tone!
Best of all, though, is that reference to women travellers isn't restricted to a nauseating passage on what women "shouldn't" do because of the dangers, and then special women's diseases. Instead, it actually suggests that there are advantages to being a woman and special places to visit (such as women's development programs) that might interest women in particular. Yay! Welcome to the 21st century LP! I don't know what this sudden change in tone is due to, but I hope it spreads throughout the LP philosophy.
Otherwise, the information is helpful and up-to-date. The maps are a bit dodgy and could do with some work. For example, Thanchi does NOT lie between Ruma and Keokradung, and nor is Keokradung the highest peak in Bangladesh. The Chittagong map, in particular, is fairly useless.
Still, a very nice job. Very impressive. Very interesting and well written.

very informative
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-21
This was my first Lonely Planet book and I could not have made the trip without this very informative and helpfull book. I highly recommend any Lonely Planet books to any one traveling abroad.

Excellent Guide
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-06
I found this guide to be very informative and helpful. The maps are a very good basis for getting a sense of where various sections of the cities are located. Some guidebooks are sorely outdated but this book is still quite current. Many of the places mentioned are still in existence. We plan to take several of the recommended trips from this guidebook as well as cycling trips. Since moving to Dhaka I have used this book continually for a reference book. I would highly recommend reading this book before coming to visit Bangladesh!

Bangladesh
Undertow
Published in Hardcover by CALYX Books (2000-09-01)
Author: Amy Schutzer
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
Used price: $0.34

Average review score:

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-11
This is a truly touching book about two women overcoming their pasts and loving each other. As a child, Macy has a crazy mother who runs away for a few days with the butcher whenever things get tough around the house. Macy and her first love, Maybelline discover their love for each other. Macy lives through the loss of her first love by living in her house and taking care of her while attending nursing school.
Dotty grows up in a house with her abusive father and horrid older twin brother and sister, Bell and Ray. Macy runs away after a fiery car crash involving her brother and sister on the day after her sixteenth birthday. She starts to work at the motel she stays at and meets Lila, a woman who sleeps off her peppermint schnapps and painkiller everyday, on the bus there. The two become friends of a sort, with Dotty looking after the ever-drugged Lila. At the amusement park nearby Lila is on a roller coaster car that is flung off the tracks into the sea, and drowns.
The two women meet while Dotty is painting the house Macy lives in, and falls off the ladder, shattering her hip. Macy the nurse helps her through her hospital stay, and moves into her house afterwards to help. They are forced to learn that their lives intertwine when Dotty's twin brother and sister come looking for her...
A very compelling read. I could'nt put it down, and I'm definitely looking forward to another from Amy Schutzer.

Lyrical tale full of surprises
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-03
Macy and Dorothy are very different, yet very much alike. After Dorothy suffers a crippling accident the two embark on a journey that will involve them coming to grips with their pasts, in order to have a future. The writing is taunt, and the situations and characters evocative. However, there are lots of dark situations her, and more than a little violence,which leads me to believe this novel isn't for everyone.

Electric love
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-08
When Dotty falls from a ladder, she is brought into the hospital where Macy works. Macy lives at the house Dotty was painting. Macy becomes Dotty's nurse after she leaves the hospital, and the two embark on a love affair. The past histories of both women creep back into their lives and threaten to destroy what's being born. Schutzer's circular and nonlinear story is full of potent writing and moving descriptions of the past pain and vivid silences both women have endured. And the surprise connection between Dotty and Macy is beautifully crafted. Schutzer's style reminded me a bit of Scott Heim, but not as dark. Any reader who's a fan of such emotionally charged works as Emma Donoghue's "Hood" and Alison Green's "Half-moon Scar" will adore this novel. This is one of my favorite novels of 2000!

Lyrical, suspenseful love story
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-10
This lyrical, beautifully wrought love story between two women, Dotty and Macy, kept me involved long after I'd read the last page. They are trying to make a true, meaningful connection for the first time in their lives, after escaping homes tainted by abuse, mental illness, and catastrophe. Macy (who has taken on the role of home nurse and lover, a role fraught with peril) feeds Dotty just a few too many pain pills. As the issues between Dotty and Macy come to a head, they confront their pasts. This was my favorite part of the novel, a lovely suspense fed not by "What comes next" but by "What happened? Who are these people?" To me, it's the difference between eating a homemade chocolate cake, where you savor every bit, and rushing through a Hostess cupcake because you're late for work. Their pasts unfold as unique mosaics combined with the perfect amount of the surreal. As they confront their pasts, they confront their issues in the present through a deep, almost Jungian exploration of their inner selves. The novel asks hard-to-answer questions. Can they possibly break the patterns they've established to form an equal partnership, make a true connection? But that question is the universal question--can we break free from our pasts?--and so I keep coming back to it, months after having finished the book. I strongly recommend this novel.

Bangladesh
Art and Life in Bangladesh
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (1997-11)
Author: Henry Glassie
List price: $49.95
Used price: $49.90

Average review score:

A Masterful Presentation
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-26
Henry Glassie has written one of the great books of the 21st Century. His descriptions of the history of Bangladesh provide exactly the context needed to understand the folklife and art that he chooses to present from this nation. Glassie balances his own thought-provoking and insightful interpretations with articulate and intriguing texts, edited together from hundreds of hours of interview material. In this manner, Glassie guides the reader to a great understanding of the incredible artistry of the people of Bangladesh. Reading this book forces one to reflect on a range of important issues -- the central one being a compassionate concern with what it means to be wealthy or poor in Bangladesh, and in America.

Not timeless, thank goodness
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-24
"Art" must be taken very broadly, not to misjudge this book by its title. Glassie is such an honest, humble writer, one would forgive him for staying with the high arts, but he brings us into the back yards of potters and other craftspeople who labor in mud and obscurity. What I appreciate the most is his exquisite sense of the moment. Glassie never generalizes or universalizes; he shows us how lives and art change (not constantly, but imperceptibly, and also in sudden surges), and at the end we know more about all people by knowing more about these few.

Explore the culture and people of Bangladesh through art
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1997-11-10
The author has captured the essence of East Bengal in this marvelous book about art in Bangladesh. While the primary medium is pottery, the book also touches on rickshaw art, engraving, boat building, straw mat production and others. More than a description of art and the artists, it delves into the philosophy of Bengal and reaches depths of religious understanding (especially among the Hindu community); that many of us who lived in Bangladesh did not encounter. If you love Bangladesh, this book is must reading.

Bangladesh
Bangladesh
Published in Paperback by Arnold Overseas (1986-03-01)
Author: Anthony Mascarenhas
List price:
Used price: $70.34

Average review score:

Fantastic based on a true story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-19
Since this book was written based on a true story, I wish I could read it once again,an utterly well written book.The book describes in one word the fall of two dictators who were brutally assasinated.Great that's what dictators deserve.

Excellent but....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-05
The full title is actually "Bangladesh: A Legacy of Blood". I found this one of the best books on the turbulent post independence period of Bangladesh. As a matter of fact, I've reread it several times. The problem is that this book was written in 1986 during the rule of Gen. Ershad, who apparently also gave interviews to the author. While the author knew Sheikh Mujib personally and is probably fair in his assessment of Bangabandhu, his verdict on Gen Zia may be a little harsh. This may have been coloured by the desire to legitimise the coup of Gen. Ershad. Nevertheless, an excellent book and a great primer for understanding Bangladeshi politics.

Fantastic based on a true story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-19
Since this book was written based on a true story, I wish I could read it once again,an utterly well written book.The book describes in one word the fall of two dictators who were brutally assasinated.Great that's what dictators deserve.

Bangladesh
Banker to the Poor: The Autobiography of Muhammad Yunus, Founder of Grameen Bank
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (2001-05-24)
Author: Muhammad Yunus
List price: $37.50
New price: $142.23
Used price: $84.33

Average review score:

Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
I was inspired and amazed at the simplicity of Yunus's concept, and appalled at the resistance he met putting it into action.
It started when he found that 42 villagers were being kept in thrall -- literally bonded slavery -- to moneylenders in one village. The total sum they owed was $27. Yunus put his hand into his own pocket, and the system of microcredit was born. THEN came the long, long, attempt to get other sponsors, government help, and a lot more.
By the end of the book they have branched out into cooperatives, health care, cell-phone providers, and the internet. As he says, no US businessman would even consider operating without a telephone.... but there is criticism that "The rural poor do not need the luxury of a telephone." But telephones help the micro-borrowers improve their businesses and find the best markets for their products. So Yunus's bank, Grameen, created GremeenPhone to provide service to villages. Some villages didn't have electricity, so they then created a nonprofit company dedicated to developing wind turbines, solar energy, etc! Just one example of Yunus's progressive thinking and nothing-is-too-tough attitude!
Not in the book, but it's inspiring to see how Yunus's idea has caught on in other parts of the world. There's even a US organization, Kiva, which allows people to extend loans over the internet to individual small businesses in far-flung countries. This is an idea that has to grow.

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-25
Very small amounts of capital loaned to people who have almost none yield very large returns. Loans are coupled with requirement that borrowers form groups of five borrowers to support and encourage each other, thereby building community. Bank is owned by the borrowers. Concept becoming worldwide movement called micro-lending. Entrepreneurship and access to credit as a cure for poverty. Great book by the guy who started it all with a $27 loan.

Life Changing!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-14
Banker to the Poor is an excellent read. The style is very easy to understand, and the jumps Yunus makes between different stories, ideas, and theories keep the reader's interest throughout. However, much more so that the style, the story itself is remarkable: to see how a single idea of one man could become a global force against poverty. His example has been extremely influential for millions of people, and his pursuit of a poverty-free world no longer seems outrageous, but in fact attainable! The story was enough for me to want to change my career direction to help the microcredit revolution.

Excellent and interesting book
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-14
Muhammad Yunus describes in this book how the idea developed about starting a bank for the poor. The writing style of Yunus makes the book very easy to read; almost like a good novel. Because this book doesn't focusses on just micro-credit (because it's an autobiography) I think it's an excellent introduction to the topic of micro-credit and finding sollutions for the poor. But for more in-dept info, buy another.

Bangladesh
A Guide to the Birds of India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives
Published in Hardcover by Princeton University Press (1998-12-07)
Authors: Richard Grimmett, Carol Inskipp, and Tim Inskipp
List price: $132.00
New price: $132.00
Used price: $66.98

Average review score:

The best available book on birds of Indian subcontinent.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-27
This is the best one-volume book on the market at this time. It has very good illustrations and good species accounts that include excellent range maps. It is the only book of one volume that covers all the birds of the Indian subcontinent with this quality of illustration. The range maps are very good and there is an adequate amount of information about each bird. It's too heavy to take into the field on your trip to India, but it is an excellent reference.

The best guide for the birds of the Indian Subcontinent.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-13
Simply the best available guide to the birds of the Indian Subcontinent. Subcontinental birders have long awaited a comphrehensive guide to the birds of this region.

No other guide comes close in quality of drawings, text and range maps. Though too large and heavy to be called a field guide. It is still brought on trips to be reviewed after a day in the field.

We eagerly await the publication of this book as a true 'field guide'- that will be useable in the field.

Comprehensive and excellent, but not a field guide
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-05
Ali and Ripley's masterwork cannot be touched in terms of the completeness of individual descriptions, but this volume is amazing in that it draws together all the subcontinent's spp. into one book. Even so, the tome is too heavy to carry to the field. The taxonomy is updated, as is the species list. The colour illustrations are of a very high quality; my quibble is that the individual species are too small to be very useful. The maps are miniscule and that limits their utility; the use of two colours would have helped under the circumstances. Otherwise, this book is a long-awaited treasure.

Bangladesh
Lonely Planet India & Bangladesh Travel Atlas
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet Publications (1995-05)
Author: Hugh Finlay
List price: $14.95
New price: $50.00
Used price: $17.69

Average review score:

Passport, Wallet and Atlas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-01
If you know where you want to go then I would agree with the above reviewer- a guidebook will tell you about nearby sites and how to get there and for that you can get by without an atlas. But for those who want to explore a particular region- how else are you going to plot an itinerary? This atlas is fully indexed by place, and also by beaches, capes & headlands, caves, forts, islands, mountians & passes, rivers, lakes, & bays, ruins and temples. And no matter how good a guidebook- only an atlas like this will assure you that you haven't missed anything of interest whereever you happen to be.

Map Scale is 4cm = 50K (1.5" = 31 miles)

For security reasons (I'm told) quality maps are not easy to find in India- and rarely for sale.

Indispensable!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-18
While working on an on-going university research project I have spent five years driving the back roads of India. This book has saved my sanity as well as my tires and axles. It is by far and away the most helpful road atlas available.

Never used it....
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-16
The maps are better than what most Indians have ever seen in their lives, which is exactly why travellers don't need it. If you are taking public transport around the country, you get plenty of information about how to go where from LP India or from information at train stations, bus stations and other travellers. It simply isn't worth the excess weight (in a rucksack). If on the other hand you are cycling or have your own motorized vehicle, this would be irreplacable (so be careful who you show it to).

Bangladesh
Price of a Dream
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1996-05-09)
Author: David Bornstein
List price: $25.00
New price: $17.70
Used price: $8.03
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Excellent seller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
Book received was just as described, received very quickly. Excellent. Would use this seller again.

Capitalism for the Landless Poor
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-12
I am a junior in highschool. I chose this book from an AP Economics reading list I received this year. When I started reading this book, I expecting a monotonous mass of numbers, terms, and theories. However, I was soon captivated by the story. Bornstein beautifully integrated the story of the Grameen Bank, the lives of its members, and the economic principles behind it.

Fighting Poverty in the Trenches, One Borrower at a Time
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
More than just a casual pass through Bangladesh to investigate Grameen Bank, the micro-credit phenomenon started a quarter century ago by Muhammad Yunus, The Price of a Dream fills in gaps left by other writings. It puts a human face on the poor of this impoverished Asian country, formerly known as East Pakistan. It brings poverty-stricken Bangladeshis into your livingroom as factual, not fictional, folks.

"Aren't all Bangladeshis poor?" you ask. No. There is wealth. But there are also tens of millions of families so impoverished that one cannot begin to understand the depth and breadth of their deprivation without actually visiting this tropical nation or coming to know some of these people through a book such as this.

Bornstein writes in a painterly way. His stories, both sad and glad, weave a mesmerizing pattern of the richness of Bangladeshi life amid trying circumstances. How people cope, how they react to successes and disasters, how they work to pull themselves up economically and socially: every thread is pulled through the loom in due course to render a true and clear representation of lives on the ragged edge. Thanks to loans from Grameen, millions of families have been able to hem that edge, one stitch at a time, to finish off their piece of cloth.

For his part, Yunus, speaking as the economics professor he once was, declares, "Credit is a powerful weapon, and anyone possessing this weapon is certainly better equipped to maneuver the forces around him to his advantage." (p. 228)

Micro-credit empowers the unempowered. No one describes that process better than David Bornstein. The Price of a Dream will open your eyes to the possibility of minimizing the indignity of poverty in our lifetime, if not eliminate it altogether. Every beautiful tapestry starts with a single thread. Even if that first thread is mere hope, it's a worthy place to begin.


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