Selected articles

‘Arabs: A 3,000 Year History of Peoples, Tribes and Empires’ by Tim Mackintosh-Smith
I have read dozens of narrative histories of the Arabs but I have never felt so transported, so entertained and so immersed.

Review of “A Line in the Sand: Britain, France and the Struggle that Shaped The Middle East”, by James Barr
Baalbek, in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, is the most magnificent temple in the entire Middle East, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
“Writing off the Beaten Track: Reflections on the Meaning of Travel and Culture in the Middle East” by Judith Caesar
She is also sincere, disarmingly honest, decent, interested in a continuous process of revealing self-examination and focusing her observations on the small community with which she has become intimate.
“Travels in Arabia Deserta” by Charles Doughty
Doughty's curious archaic English will always succeed in repelling the casual reader from his book of Arabian travels.
“Dragoman Memoirs, the works of De Gaury, Storrs and Grafftey-Smith”
Most emigrants from Britain have no wish to come back but those that do are often compelled by the bleakness of the British winter to write down their memories.
“The Messenger; The Meanings of the Life of Muhammad” by Tariq Ramadan
… they must also embrace other aspects from the lifetime of the Prophet: the freedom of women to speak out, to pray, study and learn
“The Court of the Caliphs: The Rise and Fall of Islam's Greatest Dynasty” by Hugh Kennedy
... with the very first line the reader is hooked into this epic roller-coaster of a historical narrative
“High Tea in Mosul: the true story of two Englishwomen in war-torn Iraq”, by Lynne O'Donnell
The persistent edge of fear, the innate political caution of a people brought up under Saddam's dictatorship followed by the numbing experience of living through the allied aerial bombardments and the creeping tide of street violence, assassination, bombing and kidnappings after the invasion.
“A Silver Legend: The Story of the Maria Theresa Thaler” by Clara Semple
Her coins are indeed beautiful objects, for she is cast as both human and an august empress ...

“For Lust of Knowing” by Robert Irwin
… the idea of any sort of European-wide consensus, let alone an interlocking conspiracy of deception amongst these quarrelsome individualists does not seem possible.
“The History Man, The Man Who Invented History: Travels With Herodotus’ by Justin Marozzi
… he acquires a tangibly different mentality - that of a man supporting cultural diversity wherever he finds it, rather than seeking the imposition of a new order by an outside power.
“Landfalls; On the Edge of Islam with Ibn Batutah”, by Tim Mackintosh-Smith
Mackintosh-Smith is on a quest 'to pick up the vibrations of his age, to echo sound the centuries'.
“Jerusalem, The Biography” by Simon Sebag-Montefiore
... a Holy City amongst broken arid hills on the edge of a desert, where for three thousand years pilgrims have come to repent, to pray, to celebrate, to wait for the second coming, to attempt to question God and to die.
“Can Intervention work?” by Rory Stewart and Gerald Knaus
Rory Stewart reminds us that in a recent recruitment drive, 92 out of 100 Afghan police recruits could not write their names or record numbers.
“In the Shadow of the Sword” by Tom Holland
...running like a stream of molten lava beneath the narrative of Holland’s history is an even more intriguing story.
“And Man Created God: Kings, Cults and Conquests at the Time of Jesus”, by Selina O’Grady
Selina O’Grady is also a first rate story-teller with a finely tuned ear for character and an impressive eye for atmosphere and the telling detail
Book review: “The Rise Of Islamic State: Isis And The New Sunni Revolution” by Patrick Cockburn
the invasion of Iraq in 2003 by the USA and its dependent allies is not only a crime, but one that was spectacularly ill-advised.
Book review: “Aleppo: The Rise and Fall of Syria’s Great Merchant City” by Philip Mansel
In the background to this enduring triangular relationship a shifting chain of alliances bound the city of Aleppo to tribes of Bedouin (horse-breeding) Arabs to the east, Kurdish clans in the hills to the north and Alawi highlanders to the west.
Book review: “Sufism & Surrealism” by Adonis
... for the small readership who can engage in the poetics of two cultures situated in two different ages, it is a work of extraordinary richness.
Book review: “The Man Who Created The Middle East: A Story of Empire, Conflict and the Sykes-Picot Agreement” by Christopher Simon Sykes
... he started out as a convinced imperialist but was so disgusted by British rule in India (and French rule in North Africa) that he eventually realized that mere administrative efficiency should never be exchanged for freedom.