Scott Anderson is a veteran war correspondent who has reported from Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Northern Ireland, Chechnya, Sudan, Bosnia, El Salvador and many other strife-torn countries. A frequent contributor to the New York Times Magazine, his work has also appeared in Vanity Fair, Esquire, Harper’s and Outside. He is the author of novels Moonlight Hotel and Triage and of non-fiction books The Man Who Tried to Save the World and The 4 O’Clock Murders, and co-author of War Zones and Inside The League with his brother Jon Lee Anderson.
“A fascinating book, the best work of military history in recent
memory and an illuminating analysis of issues that still loom large
today. . . . Fine, sophisticated, richly detailed . . . filled with
invaluably complex and fine-tuned information. . . . Eminently
readable. . . . For those already fascinated by Lawrence’s exploits
and familiar with his written accounts of them, Mr. Anderson’s
thoughtful, big-picture version only enriches the story it tells. .
. . Beyond having a keen ear for memorable wording, Mr. Anderson
has a gift for piecing together the conflicting interests of
warring parties. . . . It’s a big book in every sense, with a huge
amount of terrain to cover.”
—The New York Times
“Brilliant. . . . A dazzling accomplishment that combines superb
historical research with a compelling narrative.”
—The Seattle Times
“Thrilling. . . . Galvanizing and cinematic. . . . Anderson
brilliantly evokes the upheavals and head-spinningly complex
politics of an era. . . . It’s a huge assignment, explaining the
modern roots of the region as it emerged from the wreckage of war.
But it is one that Anderson handles with panache. . . . His story
is character-driven, exhilaratingly so. . . . Shows how individuals
both shape history and are, at the same time, helpless before the
dictates of great power politics.”
—The Boston Globe
“Cuts through legend and speculation to offer perhaps the clearest
account of Lawrence’s often puzzling actions and personality. . . .
Anderson has produced a compelling account of Western hubris,
derring-do, intrigue and outright fraud that hastened—and
complicated—the troubled birth of the modern Middle East.”
—The Washington Post
“Superbly fine-tuned. . . . Anderson does a fine job of piecing
together the many conflicting Middle East interests. . . . An
original, illuminating history that requires and rewards close
attention.”
—Janet Maslin, Top 10 Favorite Books of the Year, The New York
Times
“[Anderson’s] expansive, mesmerizing, and—dare one
say—cinematically detailed Lawrence in Arabia exemplifies the ways
biography and history can enhance each other.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“No four-hour movie can do real justice to the bureaucratic
fumblings, the myriad spies, heroes and villains, the dense fugue
of humanity at its best and worst operating in the Mideast war
theater of 1914-17. Thrillingly, Scott Anderson’s Lawrence in
Arabia (four stars out of four) does exactly that, weaving enormous
detail into its 500-plus pages with a propulsive narrative
thread”
—USA Today
“Invigorating. . . . Through his large cast, Anderson is able to
explore the muddles of the early 20th-century Middle East from
several distinct and enlightening perspectives. . . . [An]
engrossing, thoughtful and intricate account.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Anderson carries his erudition lightly, but there’s enough
scholarship there to make an academic proud. As with the best kind
of yarns, you don’t realize what you’ve learned until the narrator
goes silent.”
—The Daily Beast
“[A] well-researched, sweeping account . . . fresh and compelling.
. . . A gripping narrative. . . . The book’s broader achievement is
that it reveals the incompetence and deceit of Lawrence’s British
superiors in shaping the postwar Middle East.”
—Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Anderson’s well-told tale of war, betrayal and depressing
short-sightedness is also a vivid reminder of why the Middle East
continues to preoccupy us.”
—Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Anderson’s magisterial study puts a complicated picture in
context, showing how major powers’ old follies led to the wars,
religious strife and brutal dictatorships that now pollute the
development of the Middle East.”
—The Buffalo News
“Renders painfully clear how deeply the political structure of the
Middle East has been born of eccentric fantasies.”
—Esquire
“One of the more fascinating reads I have encountered in years.
[Anderson’s] cast of characters alone satisfies one’s appetite for
how espionage really works in the field.”
—Joseph C. Goulden, The Washington Times
“Lawrence of Arabia is said to have reinvented warfare, and Scott
Anderson has now reinvented Lawrence. . . . Anderson brilliantly
illuminates how the modern Middle East came to be. The research in
this book is so daringly original, and the writing so spectacular,
that it feels like I’m reading about the topic for the first time.
A deep and utterly captivating reading experience.”
—Sebastian Junger, New York Times bestselling author of War and The
Perfect Storm
“A startlingly rich and revealing portrait of one of history’s most
iconic figures. . . . Anderson is an exquisite writer and dogged
researcher, whose accounts of century-old brutalities are made
utterly convincing by the knowledge that he has personally
witnessed the sort of offhanded horror he’s unearthed in archives.
Lovers of big 20th-century history will be in nirvana.”
—Tom Reiss, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Black Count and
The Orientalist
“An amazing accomplishment. Lawrence in Arabia captures the
bravado, surreality, grandeur of the Middle East in the birth
throes of the 20th century. . . . This is history of the most vivid
and relevant order.”
—Doug Stanton, New York Times bestselling author of Horse Soldiers
and In Harms’ Way
“Lawrence in Arabia is a work of serious research and powerful
insight, but it is so rich in incredible stories and glittering
details that it felt like a guilty pleasure while I was reading it.
Completely absorbing, sweeping in scope and riveting from the first
word, this is a book that will stay with me for a long time.”
—Candice Millard, New York Times bestselling author of Destiny of
the Republic and River of Doubt
“Here is an intimate history painted on a very large canvas, with
one fantastically charismatic—and fabulously flawed—man at the
dusty center of the tale.”
—Hampton Sides, New York Times bestselling author of Ghost Soldiers
and Hellhound on His Trail
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