I recently read "I Married a Bedouin" by a Dutch woman from New Zealand who in the 1970's married a Jordanian whose family lived in Wadi Musa, in what is now the site of Petra. What attracted me to the book and the autobiographer was her unfailingly positive and accepting attitude toward her husband, her family and her new faith and her new country. Although she didn't have running water or electricity in her home - a cave - she cheerfully bore him three children and loved him until his death at age 53. She never bad-mouthed the people with whom she lived, the government or the somewhat primitive conditions which led to her husband's premature death. (QatariLady, is this what you had in mind, sharing our book experiences?)
Mandi
I recently read "I Married a Bedouin" by a Dutch woman from New Zealand who in the 1970's married a Jordanian whose family lived in Wadi Musa, in what is now the site of Petra. What attracted me to the book and the autobiographer was her unfailingly positive and accepting attitude toward her husband, her family and her new faith and her new country. Although she didn't have running water or electricity in her home - a cave - she cheerfully bore him three children and loved him until his death at age 53. She never bad-mouthed the people with whom she lived, the government or the somewhat primitive conditions which led to her husband's premature death. (QatariLady, is this what you had in mind, sharing our book experiences?)
Mandi