Audiobook5 hours
Notes from My Travels: Visits with Refugees in Africa, Cambodia, Pakistan and Ecuador
Written by Angelina Jolie
Narrated by Dara Rosenberg
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
()
About this audiobook
From the ever-intriguing and appealing actress Angelina Jolie comes the personal journals she compiled while performing humanitarian relief efforts in such countries as Sierra Leone and Tanzania, Pakistan and Cambodia.
Three years ago, award-winning actress Angelina Jolie took on a radically different role as a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Here are her memoirs from her journeys to Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Pakistan, Cambodia, and Ecuador, where she lived and worked and gave her heart to those who suffer the world's most shattering violence and victimization. Here are her revelations of joy and warmth amid utter destitution...compelling snapshots of courageous and inspiring people for whom survival is their daily workŠand candid notes from a unique pilgrimage that completely changed the actress's worldview—and the world within herself.
Three years ago, award-winning actress Angelina Jolie took on a radically different role as a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Here are her memoirs from her journeys to Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Pakistan, Cambodia, and Ecuador, where she lived and worked and gave her heart to those who suffer the world's most shattering violence and victimization. Here are her revelations of joy and warmth amid utter destitution...compelling snapshots of courageous and inspiring people for whom survival is their daily workŠand candid notes from a unique pilgrimage that completely changed the actress's worldview—and the world within herself.
Author
Angelina Jolie
Angelina Jolie is an award-winning actress and has starred in over thirty films, including Maleficent, Girl, Interrupted, Changeling, and many more. She has directed several films, including one documentary. She lives in Los Angeles with her children.
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Reviews for Notes from My Travels
Rating: 3.8333333333333335 out of 5 stars
4/5
6 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book surprised me. It's obviously meant to be exactly as the title suggests: Notes--there's very little in depth information or discussion of specific situations, though there is enough here to give you a base of background and larger conflicts/situations. As someone who's been reading quite a bit about relief work in the last year, I expected to move through this book quickly. I thought the lack of in depth explanation and personal detail (of those she talked to) would make this somewhat easier to take than some of the other memoir type books I"ve been reading. Simply, I was apparently wrong. About half-way through, I realized that each time I sat down with the book, I was reading fewer and fewer pages. It turns out, the lack of detail means that she covers SO many people, the scope of the situations comes across even more clearly than if she were to bombard us with statistics and names. Moving from paragraph to paragraph with new people and places in each ended up being very affecting for this reader. I'm not sure how much this would have been affected by my previous reading. I think that this book could be read and understood, as well as worthwhile, for readers who don't have the same knowledge I do--but I'm not positive. I will say, though, that one of the most interesting sections here was the journal from Ecuador dealing with Columbians; this was the area I was least familiar with going into the book.In general, I recommend this as a relatively easy read for what it is--the material is far from easy to take, but it is not overly or needlessly graphic, and the journal-type layout makes the book move quickly, at least at first. As I said before though, the farther I got into it, the less I could take in one sitting. Jolie does work at focusing on the positive though, as much as the negative, where she can find it, and this was refreshing, though it may have made the book harder to take simply by the attention to the simple pleasures which are, essentially, the only positives. Regardless, I do recommend it for someone interested in a layman's look into contemporary refugee situations.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Disclaimer - I like Angelina Jolie. I think that she's an amazing woman, a great actress and classier than certain people who feel the need to name-drop her in every other interview. That's partly why I read this and the other was that it gave me a significant push into Asia that I needed for my challenge.
Anyway, before Brangelina and all the kids Angelina Jolie was recruited as a UN Goodwill Ambassador for Refugees and as part of her duties she went travelling around the world to different areas to talk to displaced people. This book is her diaries during those trips and her thoughts and experiences. Almost from the start you warm to her, even if you didn't like her. The book is written such as we would write - chronicling little things and snippets of conversation as she discovers how different life is. There are little points, barely mentioned, where she realises that a boy she had spoken to was killed, or where she watches children pick litter in the street to earn money, or sees children being sold into the sex trade at the age of 5 or 6 because they can't afford not to or where she's told how gangs would come in and make family members amputate each others limbs, or sees children carrying guns where you can feel how it affects her. It's not done in a gratuitous 'oh woe is me' way, but in a way where, no matter how brief the image is, it sticks with you.
At one point in Cambodia she mentions how she and her friend went to a museum and in it they show pictures of some of the atrocities committed and she lists some of them and explains how she had to leave such was the effect it had on her.
In another account she went to Pakistan to speak with Afghan refugees. This is before 9/11 and she says that afterwards she donated money to the Afgahn refugees and as a result she received death-threats because people couldn't differentiate between Afghanistan and the Taliban. That stuck with me because even now I still think that some people fail to make those distinctions.
I know a lot of people don't like her, but I think reading this you can understand her stance on life and why she adopted the kids that she did. I just think it's something people should think about. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It was okay, I was so obsessed with her when I bought this book,It was sad to read although it's real to what we are sometimes not aware or blind to what is happening in the world.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I found it a very touching and compelling book. It is about Angelina Jolie's role as a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and her travels to places like Sierra Leone and Cambodia. If you are interested in Ms. Jolie's humanitarian work or finding out more about the refugees of the world then I think you will appreciate this book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Her journal from her first trips working with the UNHCR. There was so much information almost all of it distressing. There is so much that our media doesn't tell us. In this book she writes about Afghanistan, Cambodia, Seoria Leone , and Columbia. There is so much work to be done.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It was good and sad, but Angelina Jolie doesn't really have the writing skills to make it powerful.