Her book,
Not Without My Daughter, is an account of her experiences in 1984–1986 when she left
Alpena, Michigan to go to
Iran with her husband and daughter for what she was promised would be a short visit. Once there, she and her daughter were held against their will. The book was made into
a 1991 film starring
Sally Field as Betty. According to the book, she and her husband,
Sayyed Bozorg “Moody” Mahmoody, and their daughter,
Mahtob Mahmoody, traveled to Iran in August 1984 for what her husband said would be a two-week visit with his family in
Tehran. Once the two weeks were over, however, he refused to allow his wife and child to leave. When she protested, Moody struck Betty. It was the first time Mahtob had seen her father hit her mother. After Moody broke the news to Betty, she got extremely sick with
dysentery. Mahtob sat at her side day after day, watching her fade in and out of consciousness. Betty asked Mahtob to make sure Moody, a medical doctor, didn’t give her an injection as she feared it may have been lethal. Mahtob sat there and made sure her mother was safe. Betty was trapped in a nation hostile to Americans, with in-laws who were hostile to her, and an abusive husband. According to the book, her husband separated her from her daughter for weeks on end. He also assaulted her and threatened to kill her if she tried to leave. She eventually escaped with her daughter. The book details her escape over the snowy
Zagros Mountains into
Turkey, and the help she received from many Iranians. After returning to the USA in 1986, she filed for divorce. ==Other books==