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The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West
Unavailable
The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West
Unavailable
The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West
Audiobook11 hours

The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West

Written by Imran Ahmad

Narrated by Imran Ahmad

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Both deliciously funny and deeply insightful, THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN is a beguiling multi-layered memoir that has touched the hearts of readers all over the world. At the age of one, Imran Ahmad moved from Pakistan to London, growing up torn between his Islamic identity and his desire to embrace the West. Join Imran in his lifelong struggle against corruption and injustice, and as he grapples with some of Life's most profound questions. What does God do exactly? Do you automatically go to Hell for following the wrong religion? How do you persuade a beautiful woman to become your girlfriend (and would driving a Jaguar XJS help?) Can you maintain a James Bond persona without the vodka, cigarettes and women - even whilst your parents are trying to arrange your marriage? Imran's unimagined journey makes thoughtful, compelling, and downright delightful reading. With a unique style and unflinching honesty, THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN addresses serious issues in an extraordinarily light way, and will leave readers both thinking deeply and laughing out loud.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 3, 2012
ISBN9781611134070
Unavailable
The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West

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Reviews for The Perfect Gentleman

Rating: 4.074075555555556 out of 5 stars
4/5

27 ratings6 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Very Interesting! A little tedious because the entire book follows his entire education in Britain, but also interesting because it does give you an idea of what it is like there, especially as a minority. I had no idea people were to racist! He deals with it valiantly though. Had no idea people have trouble finding a place to rent or what new immigrants had to go through back then. I would have gone straight back to Pakistan if I had to deal with what his parents had to.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A lively book group discussion.I recently heard Imran Ahmad speak at a literary festival and I have to say he was a riveting speaker. He kept a large audience highly entertained for an hour with the ease of a natural.As a result of this excellent one-man-show I recommended we try his book at our monthly reading group.Unfortunately it was not received with the enthusiasm of other Amazon reviewers and my star rating above reflects the average view of the 9 people who discussed the book, two of whom only gave 1 star.The style was a bit difficult to crack at first, described by one lady as 'wooden'. Personally, this didn't bother me after the first few chapters but I would have liked to have seen a development of the style as the author grew and matured.We also wondered why there was so little reference to the other members of his family, especially his brothers. I found myself wondering how they were coping with life in a state school, how did their experience compare with that of their older brother?One of our members was particularly incensed by some of his comments about Islam. She has said she will communicate with him directly and I do not intend to air her views here.It is basically a coming-of-age diary, with many of the experiences that any normal growing boy would have, compounded by the feeling of being an outsider due to race and religion. There were some interesting themes running through the book, particularly cars and their accompanying status, and the problem of meeting women. Neither of these are unique to immigrant families.The ongoing conflict in the author's mind between Islam and Christianity are what makes this book unusual. This is tackled openly and in response to the views of others around him at the time, but does not become overpowering.I have to say, on the positive side, that this book provided us with one of our livlier discussions, with very little recourse to the questions in the back of some of our copies.And we want to know if the author ever did have any success with the female sex??
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This the funny and often educational story of Ahmad's childhood & early adulthood in Britain, from the 60s to the 90s. He often comes across as somewhat naive, but that is part of the charm of his writing - and I'm sure there is a knowing retrospective wink included in many of the anecdotes. He grew up at a similar time as I, and I found some particular resonances with his experiences. The epilogue, I felt, could have been left out - the last paragraph of the last real chapter would have been a doozy on which to end. Although I'm not at all religious, I found his learning about his own faith very interesting. His openness and consideration of other faiths, and on what basis we should choose our religion, were very well argued. The encounters with evangelical Christians rang a bell with me from an encounter with Billy Graham in my teens.An absolutely stonking read - completed in one sitting.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A humorous and gentle account of the life of a man who turned out to be humorous and gentle in person. I was lucky enough to hear him speak in Edinburgh and then introduced him to the book group in Carnoustie. The book was voted a winner.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Very Interesting! A little tedious because the entire book follows his entire education in Britain, but also interesting because it does give you an idea of what it is like there, especially as a minority. I had no idea people were to racist! He deals with it valiantly though. Had no idea people have trouble finding a place to rent or what new immigrants had to go through back then. I would have gone straight back to Pakistan if I had to deal with what his parents had to.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Imran Ahmed’s book Unimagined: A Muslim Boy Meets the West drew me in very slowly. It started with sweet remembrances of his early days as a Pakistani boy growing up in London and began to move more quickly as he made his way through school and into University and eventually graduate school and a career. His prose is very undecorated and straightforward. He makes you laugh with familiarity over awkward teen situations and seethe with anger over the travesties of racism and discrimination. Even though we are very different people, his story felt familiar and uplifting.He creates tension over three main issues in his life: following his true calling as opposed to the career he thinks he should follow, understanding his faith in light of a backdrop of Western Evangelical Christianity, and meeting and finding someone to love.As he got older and began to have a more nuanced understanding of career, faith and love I began to get more drawn into his struggles. I wanted for him to become enlightened and understand his life (The same way someone reading your memoir would wish the same for you.) and so it became a book I could not put down. Yes, a simple story about a Muslim boy growing up in the West became a page turner. Who would Imran Ahmed become?I don’t want to spoil too much of this fine memoir. The joy of this book is in the evolution of Imran’s thinking and the way he slowly comes to self discovery. He is a nice guy and you want him to figure it out so he can enjoy his life. He comes to some resolution in two of the three areas of his life, and the subject of his next memoir might be what happens to him in the third area. I will look forward to reading his next book.