"Swift, intense and forensic. . . . [Tax] brings the habit 'optimism of the will and pessimism of the intellect' to [
A Road Unforeseen]. The journey takes her deep to the history of Middle East and the fate of Kurds [where] now [women] are improvising a new model of living in an enclave that is not an ethnic state but a confederation of half a dozen ethnicities, organizing co-operative economy in an egalitarian borderland called Rojava. Meredith Tax wonders whether they can survive. But she is inspired. And reading her book, you will be, too." --
openDemocracy 50.50 "Exceptional. . . . Not only informative but heart-wrenching. . . . It is the analysis that situates what is otherwise described as a struggle against terrorism or a struggle for national freedom as a more complicated struggle for the emancipation of women, and thereby the emancipation of society, that gripped me as a reader and activist." --
AlterNet "With her combined expertise on fundamentalism, feminism, and human rights, Tax . . . shows what it means to view aspects of the Middle East through these basic prisms. . . . [
A Road Unforeseen] is a welcome addition to the growing literature in English on the Kurds and will be mined for its perspectives and insights for years to come. 'Any movement for real transformation, ' she insists, 'must make the demands of women central.' This superb book will be an essential resource for this question in the years to come." --
ROAR Magazine "A book of revelations about life during wartime in Rojava. . .
A Road Unforeseen celebrates those women who are ripping the guts out of ISIS and explains how they came to be at the center of the Kurdish struggle for freedom." --
First of the Month "[
A Road Unforeseen] is an on-the-fly intervention in an ongoing conflict. It smoothly shows many things at once, and [Tax] does a commendable job in creating a concise and readable account of this tangled situation." --
Toward Freedom "Thorough and well-documented. . . . Readers interested in geopolitical issues and history will no doubt be grateful for [Tax's] lucid explanation of events involving countries like Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran and for illuminating the plight of the Kurdish people in the Middle East." --
New York Journal of Books "Zeroes in on a contemporary example of unanticipated moxie: The successful, if little-known, resistance to Muslim fundamentalism that has developed along the Syrian-Turkish border." --
Lilith "Tax approaches the Syrian conflict from a unique perspective as she focuses on the role of Kurdish women combatants. . . . Extensively researched, this is an immensely relevant primer on a complex people whose past and future are critical to the success of peace in their region." --
Booklist "An important look at an unfolding situation little understood in the West." --
Publishers Weekly "Impressively well researched, written, organized and presented,
A Road Unforeseen: Women Fight the Islamic State is a seminal study. . . . Consistently compelling, informed and informative,
A Road Unforeseen is very highly recommended." --
Midwest Book Review "We in the West are so unused to thinking of Middle Eastern and Muslim women as liberated, let alone as feminist revolutionaries, that Meredith Tax's remarkable book,
A Road Unforeseen, comes as a welcome correction. By tracing the historical and political evolution of a group of Kurdish feminist guerrillas, Tax shows us what revolution looks like with feminism at its center, even in the midst of the repressive and violent attacks on women and Kurds in Turkey, Iraq, and Syria. This powerful and persuasive book is a must-read for anyone who takes the plight of women seriously." --
Helen Benedict, author of
The Lonely Soldier and
Sand Queen "An indefatigable political thinker and activist takes us on a forensic journey into the gendering of geopolitical conflict and resistance." --
Beatrix Campbell, author of
Diana, Princess of Wales: How Sexual Politics Shook the Monarchy and
End of Equality: The Only Way Is Women's Liberation "This is the book I've been waiting for--only it's richer, deeper, and more intriguing than I could have imagined.
A Road Unforeseen is a major contribution to our understanding of feminism and Islam, of women and the world, and gives me fresh hope for change." --
Barbara Ehrenreich, author of
Nickel and Dimed and
Living With a Wild God "This book lifts the lid on one of the best-kept secrets of our times, the birth of a revolution in the Middle East driven by gender equality and direct democracy. Meredith Tax makes a well-researched, cogent, and passionate case for why we should all get behind this experiment, at once fragile and gutsy, in Rojava, northern Syria, and Turkey." --
Rahila Gupta, author of
Provoked and
Enslaved "
A Road Unforeseen is essential reading to understand the extraordinary democratic revolution led by the Kurds in Syria. This is compelling history but also a clarion call to the US and the international community to support this fragile project that elevates and celebrates human rights, democracy, and equality for all genders, races, and religions." --
Carne Ross, author of
Independent Diplomat and
The Leaderless Revolution "At last we have a book that tells us what we crave to know each day as we open the newspaper to read about IS, Islamists, shifting alliances, enslaved women, fleeing immigrants, and shocking cruelties. Meredith Tax shows us how the Kurds of Rojava are trying to put in place a system of equality between men and women and take local, democratic control of their lives, which would be remarkable anywhere, let alone in a war zone. As Tax so clearly demonstrates here, putting women at the center of a struggle for freedom changes everything. It's time to learn about the extraordinary Rojava and the hope it offers that another world is possible." --
Ann Snitow, author of
The Feminism of Uncertainty "Meredith Tax tells the tangled and amazing history of Kurdish politics--from family feuds to terrorism to radical democracy and feminism--with just the right mixture of admiration and concern." --
Michael Walzer, author of
Just and Unjust Wars and
The Paradox of Liberation