'Who here has read Ayaan Hirsi Ali's book, Infidel?' For the first time in three years not a single person raised their hand. At book club meetings, church gatherings, women's groups and Islam presentations across America, countless hands usually shoot up in the air in response to this question.
Read MoreGAPABA: War on Error Review (Review by Saba Ashraf) →
Melody Moezzi, a recent graduate ofEmory Law School, an Iranian, MuslimAmerican writes a book setting forth simply, in twelve different chapters, the stories of12 American Muslims. Weaved throughout the stories are personal musings and reflections of Melody.
Read MoreDayton Daily News: Centerville grad’s book on Muslim Stereotypes now UD required summer reading (By Katherine Ullmer) →
A book written by a 1997 Centerville High School graduate now living in Atlanta, Ga., has been made required reading this summer for more than 1,700 incoming University of Dayton students, according to a University of Dayton press release.
Read MoreThe Nation: War on Error Review (Review by M. Junaid Alam) →
Who are the Muslims in our midst? Terrorists? Existential threats to Western civilization? Sworn enemies of America?
Read MoreCreative Loafing: Melody Moezzi wins Georgia Author of the Year Award (By Helen Herbst) →
The Georgia Author of the Year Awards (GAYA), presented by the Georgia Writers Association, were handed out last Saturday at Kennesaw State University Center. Author and attorney Melody Moezzi won in the Creative Nonfiction: Essay category for War on Error: Real Stories of American Muslims, her first book.
Read MoreEmory Magazine: Alumni Ink (Profile by Mary J. Loftus) →
When Melody Moezzi 06L 06MPH, of Decatur, wrote War on Error: Real Stories of American Muslims (University of Arkansas Press, 2007), she wanted to correct an imbalance she has observed in America since the 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Read MoreAtlanta Magazine: Q&A with Melody Moezzi →
Melody Moezzi, the Muslim American–born daughter of Iranian parents, talks about her new book, War on Error: Real Stories of American Muslims.
Read MoreABA Journal: Law Grad Writes Book on Fellow Muslims (Profile by Martha Neil) →
Individuals Melody Moezzi contacted about publishing her first book wanted the Emory University law graduate to interview a terrorist.
Read MoreAJC: Stereotype-defying young Muslims make writer's point (Profile by Phil Kloer) →
When Melody Moezzi was looking for a publisher for her first book — a look at the lives of youngAmerican Muslims — two companies offered her the same deal: Find and interview a terrorist, and we'll give you an advance.
Read MoreDayton Daily News: Centerville grad writes about Muslims (By Jim DeBrosse)
Melody Moezzi, a Muslim of Iranian descent who grew up in the Dayton area, would like the world to know she doesn't know any terrorists. That's one reason her new book, The War on Error: Real Stories of American Muslims, doesn't feature any.
Read MorePublishers Weekly: Melody Moezzi, Author of War on Error (Profile by Kimberly Winston) →
Melody Moezzi is dismayed by the portraits of Islam and her fellow Muslims she sees in the American press. Where are the people like herself and the people she knows -- the people who lead workaday lives and follow a religion that is far removed from terrorism?
Read MoreParabola: Coming Clean (War on Error excerpt) →
I was eating an empanada and waiting for my clothes to dry at a local laundromat not far from my apartment shortly after the owners of the nearby convenience store had chosen to temporarily shut it down when María, who had worked at the laundromat since I’d been there and with whom I’d developed a camaraderie, started talking about how happy she was that the two brothers who owned that convenience store had been forced to shut down. She told me that she should have known better than to have ever bought even a stick of gum from those disgusting Arabs. Then she told me that we were lucky that we had a glorious, civilized, Catholic culture that helped us stick together and succeed. I told her that I liked the brothers and that I used to watch soccer games in the back of the store with them because they had satellite. Then she asked me why the hell I did that given all they ever watched were all the Middle Eastern countries’ matches. I had told her twice before that I was Iranian, and it now became clear to me that she either had no idea where Iran was or that she wasn’t listening to me. “María,” I told her, with tears running down my face by that point, “Soy iraní. Soy casi árabe, y soy musulmana.” I threw the remainder of my empanada at her and I ran home, leaving my laundry to fend for itself.
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