The book club I belong to decided to read Queen Noor’s “Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life”, her autobiography, and this is a summary of our review. Part of the reason we chose this book was in the hopes that it would be a more accessible way of learning more about that part of the world, and partially because one of the members used to work in the same company as Queen Noor when she was still Lisa Halaby, and was curious as to what the book would be like.
The book was obviously popular amongst book clubs; there was a list of potential questions for people to discuss in the back, most of which missed the point of the book in our opinion. So we ignored them.
Leap of Faith was written not only as an autobiography, but also to expose Jordan’s point of view to a wider (Western) audience; Queen Noor is quite clear about that in the book. As such, it’s successful. It’s an easy read, though very choppy. The book has a mostly chronological structure, but keeps wandering off into themes and so you hear about various children and what they did before you get to read the chapter in which they’re born, for example. If you can read the book reasonably quickly, then it all still hangs together.
Our book club member who had known Lisa before (albeit not very well) pointed out that a lot of things were missing; this is not a tell-all book and Queen Noor seems to be at some pains to paint herself as naive and innocent before her marriage, despite her education and work experience. But the book does succeed where it presents Jordan’s point of view on issues, particularly the issue of Israel and Palestine. I am not particularly well read on Middle Eastern issues and previously hadn’t known that anybody there considered the Egypt-Israel peace treaty of 1979 a bad idea; the book goes into some detail on why (chiefly that many wanted a comprehensive peace treaty and feared that a piecemeal solution would hinder that). I also hadn’t known that Jordan is a poor country with no oil, or anything about the Hashemites, and this book is an accessible introduction to both of those topics.
In summary, I found the book worth reading even though the choppiness and inconsistencies annoyed me. A good introduction to a part of the world that I didn’t know enough about previously, and probably still don’t, but at least I know more than I did.