USA Today
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From Booklist
Sasson and Saudi Princess Sultana follow their earlier accounts of social oppression of women in Arabia with one that focuses on the Saudi royal family and how, despite its wealth and relative freedom from social conventions, its men continue to oppress women. Specific instances include the forced marriage of a young niece to a brutal older man and a cousin's harem of sex slaves. The royal women react with varying degrees of acceptance; an occasional, minor rebellion; and alcohol and drug abuse. Although Sultana's husband is a more enlightened man, she reveals that even she has a drinking problem, brought on by the stress of helplessly witnessing inequities. Sasson and Sultana also detail Islamic culture and teachings and the contradictions between what the Koran teaches regarding women and the cultural interpretations made by men in Saudi society. Sultana has two daughters. One, like her, resists the male-dominated culture, but the other is so traditional that it frightens Sultana. Gossipy but insightful. Vanessa Bush
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Today
"It is a mark of great courage that Sultana decided to continue her story."
Princess Sultana's Circle, Vol. 3 FROM OUR EDITORS
As exotic as any Arabian Nights tale, Princess Sultana's Circle continues Jean Sasson's astonishing narrative of Princess Sultana of the Royal House of Al Sa'ud. The struggles of this regal feminist against the specter of Islamic fundamentalism give this biography an eerie relevance.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
With Princess Sultanaᄑs Circle, Jean Sasson completes the compelling trilogy of the women of Saudi Arabia.
In her earlier nonfiction bestsellers, Princess & Princess Sultanaᄑs Daughters, Jean Sasson helped create a new genre that has stirred widespread interest in the plight of oppressed women of Saudi Arabia. Telling the true story of ᄑSultana,ᄑ a pseudonymous member of the Saudi royal family, Sasson described a society in which women are second class citizens with few rights, without control over their own lives, and who are subject to harsh punishment, for the slightest transgressions. Exposing what Sasson calls ᄑone of the most backward and cruelest social systems in the world for women,ᄑ the books remain best sellers with women of every age and nationality. These books have caught the attention of educators who used them as part of their reading curriculum. These books are also some of the most popular for womenᄑs reading clubs.
Now, in Princess Sultanaᄑs Circle, Jean Sasson and Princess Sultana continue to expose the primitive cultural traditions that relegate the women of Saudi Arabia to near-slave status. Portraying Sultanaᄑs great courage in risking all that she has in the quest to effect change, the final book in the Princess trilogy centers on her crisis of confidence and ultimate triumph as she stands up to the seemingly unassailable power of Saudi Arabian men. With Princess Sultanaᄑs Circle, Jean Sasson brings Sultanaᄑs story to a satisfying close, leaving readers with a sense of hope about the future of Saudi women.
Princess Sultanaᄑs Circle opens with Sultana questioning her ability to improve the lives of women in her homeland. As her wealth and possessions have increased, Sultanaᄑs happiness and contentment have decreased, undermining her aspirations to assist helpless women. When her niece is forced into an arranged marriage with a cruel, depraved older man, Sultanaᄑs attempts to intervene fail, intensifying her sense of powerlessness. Feeling frustrated and depressed, she secretly begins to drink. Imbibing alcohol is dangerous in Saudi Arabia, where it is illegal and also a sin for which she could be divorced by her husband and shunned by her family.
Soon after, while visiting the lavish home of a royal cousin, Sultana and her two daughters make a horrifying discoveryᄑtheir relative is keeping a harem of sex slaves in one of the pavilions on his vast estate. Mostly Asian and quite young, the imprisoned girls tell horror stories of having been bought by their current master from their families or at public auction. Unable to rescue them because, in Saudi Arabia, there are no legal means available to free these women, Sultana blames herself for not being able to do more. A trip to New York, meant to revive her spirits, only serves to glaringly highlight the simple freedoms that Saudi women lack, from driving a car to wearing regular clothes in public.
Sultanaᄑs rebellious daughters are also providing her with daily challenges. Amani, her younger child, still caught up in Islamic zeal, may be a member of a banned political group of Middle Eastern dissidents who oppose the Saudi royal family. Her older daughter, Maha, continues to chafe against Saudi cultural restrictions and the roving ᄑmorals police.ᄑ Their contrasting views on Muslim womanhood provide a fascinating glimpse into the larger internal conflicts currently confronting their country.
Ultimately, with her husbandᄑs help, Sultana is able to confront her drinking problem. This, along with several other events, gives Sultana a fresh perspective. Breaking free of her apathy, she returns to her life-long goal of raising the status of women in Saudi Arabia. However, Sultanaᄑs renewed sense of purpose is quickly tested when her nephews are caught committing an unspeakable act against a 14-year-old girl, who had been expressly purchased for sex. Galvanized into action, Sultana risks her personal status and wealth to take a stand against the complacency of her male relatives over the childᄑs fate. Ultimately, Sultana and her sisters vow to form a circle of support that will surround and shelter abused women and girls.
Honest and deeply personal, Princess Sultanaᄑs Circle depicts one womanᄑs heroic struggle to make a difference in a culture where change in regard to womenᄑs rights is painstakingly slow. All who read this story are certain to be moved to action by its heartfelt message: to join Princess Sultanaᄑs symbolic circle of protection and work together to secure justice and equality for women everywhere.