| The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope
Publisher: Simon & Schuster |
|
| ISBN: 0743246004 List Price: $29.95 Amazon Price: $18.87 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: Very enlightening book Prior to reading "The Defining Moment", I didn't fully appreciate how close the United States came to complete despair, abandonment of capitalism, and dictatorship. I had no idea of the enormous role of Treasury Department holdovers from the Hoover administration in crafting early New Deal legislation. I'd never known of the intense dislike Hoover and Roosevelt had for each other. I would have rated this book five stars, except that Jonathan Alter, liberal that he is, could not resist taking a very few, very subtle swipes at President Reagan and President George W. Bush. (For a sample, see the footnote - YES, the footnote! - on page 293.) These slights against two Republican presidents left me with the same icky feeling I get when movies contain gratuitous profaniity or violence or sexuality - that old, "Why'd you have to ruin a perfectly good movie (or book, in this case) by tossing THAT in?" feeling. With the exception of these four or five editorializing jabs, this was a great read. Summary: To Quote Abe Lincoln "Seventh Son" You are an ignoramus and your convoluted slant on Presidentail history is that of a grade-school dropout. FDR was probably our greatest President whose far-reaching legislation is helping millions of us to survive in today's economic high-cost-of-living struggle. Why don't you save your ridiculous rantings for your skin-head meetings or bathroom walls. To quote Abraham Lincoln, "It is better to be thought of as a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt." These reviews are for serious readers. Summary: A fascinating look into the life and presidency of FDR Every list of the "greatest" American presidents I have ever seen includes the name of Franklin Delano Roosevelt near the very top, usually second only to that of Abraham Lincoln. The canonization ceremonies for him have long since been completed. Even the Republican Party, which so reviled him during his 12 years in office, now invokes his name at its tribal gatherings. In this book Jonathan Alter, a senior editor at Newsweek and an analyst for NBC News, tries to pin down why and how Roosevelt, perceived in his early career as a lightweight dilettante, was able to rouse the country from its defeatist funk and set it on the road to recovery. Alter tries hard to be even-handed, but in the end his admiration for Roosevelt, though tempered by important reservations, shines through clearly. His major thesis is that Roosevelt was no heavyweight ideologue with a set program, nor even a particularly deep thinker; he was an actor, a master of "Presidential stagecraft" who led by practicing the fine political art of "calculated ambiguity." The New Deal that he created did not, Alter admits in the end, cure the Depression --- but it inspired a mood of confidence and hope that gave the American people the will to tackle their problems with the belief that they could somehow be solved. Alter's thesis is not a new idea. There is a huge shelf of books about FDR that make much the same point. Alter's approach is not to write a conventional biography of FDR but to concentrate on the period from his first nomination to the end of the famous "hundred days" that began his first term. He begins by teasing out of FDR's childhood and youth many of the qualities of mind and personality that came to the fore during that first term. He is illuminating, for example, on the influence exerted over FDR by his formidable mother Sara, the trauma of the 1921 polio attack that made him a cripple for life and the unsuccessful attempt on his life in Miami shortly after he took office. These ideas also are not new, but Alter adds a piquant twist to many of them by making constant comparisons (often in his footnotes) with later presidents. The unspoken subtext is usually to FDR's credit rather than that of his successors. He lays heavy emphasis on the grave crisis that gripped the country on the very day that FDR took office in 1933. Banks all over the nation were closed, unemployment was rampant, rumors of violence and revolution were in the air. Some said the country needed a dictator. Alter's interpretation of this frightening moment is characteristically double-edged. He faults Roosevelt for seemingly allowing the crisis to get worse rather than offering cooperation to the dour Herbert Hoover so he could make a more dramatic entrance as the nation's hoped-for savior; but he lauds Roosevelt's famous inaugural address and enthuses over his calls for action --- any action --- to get the country's economic engine started again. A fair number of Roosevelt's early initiatives, Alter reveals, were actually thought up by Hoover lieutenants. Alter has plumbed the vast ocean of Roosevelt literature deeply. He agrees with the conventional wisdom that FDR governed by playing off his team of "brain trust" advisors against each other while covering his own tracks with an air of "affable impenetrability." His thesis --- never spelled out in so many words --- seems to be that presidents who govern by theatrical gesture and opportunistic illusion-making can be just as effective, if not more so, than those who come to office with rigid ideological agendas. Sometimes, Alter seems to be saying that political magicians are just what this country needs. Hmmmm...does the shoe fit today? --- Reviewed by Robert Finn (Robertfinn@aol.com) Summary: |
| The Future for Investors: Why the Tried and the True Triumph Over the Bold and the New
Publisher: Crown Business |
|
| ISBN: 140008198X List Price: $27.50 Amazon Price: $17.33 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: The Future for Investors by Jeremy J. Siegel The author prefers the "tried and true" stocks over more risky ventures because the basic fundamentals are well known and more predictable over time. The internet stocks bubbled because we held onto the belief that the new medium would change drastically the way we do business. It did so in some respects but not in others. Customer relationships are still key to many businesses. The author asks that we critically evaluate stocks with a dispassionate view rather than engaging in random risks. According to the authors, we should avoid unknown companies and stocks selling at a triple digit Price/Earnings Ratio. Also, never short sell in a bubble because the bears are rewarded eventually. Wide media coverage tends to overinflate a stock due to unwavering expectations and unfounded beliefs. Siegel sets forth real equity returns from the 1801-2003 period. Surprisingly, stocks tend to be less risky over the long term time frame. Overall, the book is a good value for the savvy investor. Summary: Stocks For The Long Run, Part 2 Siegel presents an interesting view of the next few decades and how to profit off them. With the book, he had to do two things: prove that "Stocks For The Long Run" still works and join in on the many books about the effect of demographics on equities. Siegel's portfolio theories are the strength of the book. Compounding dividends and the mean aversion theory of stocks have been a success. The time period Siegel uses to come up with hypothetical returns has been the best 50 years for US markets, so one can only hope it continues. Siegel's demographic models show that Harry S. Dent's Age Wave gets completely absorbed by rising middle-classes around the world and several other smaller solutions. But the numbers just don't add up and I mean that quite literally. This is one of the largest demographic problems the planet has seen in 500 years. I fully expect some sacrifice coming up. Too many people owe too much money. In case of a worst case scenario, such as those in "The Next Great Bubble Boom," "The Coming Generational Storm," "Empire of Debt," and Prechtor/Folsom's daily newsletters, Siegel recommends TIPS. Read that again. TIPS during a period of deflation. I don't know what the future will bring, but at least I know what a business professor's computer models think will happen. If you're set on reading this book, be sure to read "Stocks For The Long Run" first. Summary: A very useful approach for those who want to sleep easy I find Professor Siegel's research to be very valuable and, while I probably will not follow the tenets of his strategy exactly, have certainly gleaned many important lessons from this book which have already served me well. Siegel's previous book Stocks for the Long Run made the case for long-term investing in stocks-over any 20 year period no asset class has outperformed them. Not bonds, not real estate-nothing. In this book Siegel expands on that research, presenting a methodology for choosing stocks (which will be held over the long run) to take advantage of the wealth accumulation the stock market can provide. Siegel's approach is very value oriented and quite conservative. He advocates choosing stocks with high yields (dividends) in sectors that have consistently performed well, and in companies where management has a "tried and true" approach that has not changed. These firms must also have low P/E ratios, which indicates that Wall Street's expectations of them are somewhat low. Over time, he argues, these quality companies will continue to beat Wall Street's expectations and, with dividends reinvested, compound the wealth of anyone who follows this approach. For someone who would like relative piece of mind in the stock market and who doesn't want to be constantly shifting his or her portfolio, this book is invaluable. It helps someone choose stocks that have performed for generations, and will lead investors to a lot of "sleep easy" type stocks (like Hershey foods, for example). On the other hand there will be some volatility in the mix-Siegel's top performer is the cigarette manufacturer Altria (the old Phillip Morris), whose future as a company never quite seems completely certain. The benefit of this, Siegel argues, is that as problems arise (such as lawsuits) the dividend remains constant, which means that, at dividend time, more shares are bought than would be under normal circumstances, which creates tremendous value for the long term investor (in the form of more shares). Detractors of Siegel's method cite taxation of capital gains as a primary concern, and indeed this is an issue. Siegel does treat this issue (albeit briefly) and suggests that a financial planner can assist someone in choosing the most tax beneficial investment account. The argument can also be made that followers of Siegel's methods would have missed out on the biggest names of the last 50 years (Wal-Mart, Microsoft, Home Depot, etc), but his argument is that, while great new firms like these do, at times, come along, most of the time people pay way too much for "the next best thing," and thus the long term value he seeks is not there. Siegel's theory of the new Global Economy is also fascinating, and he makes a good case why all the outsourcing occurring in the United States today may not be such a bad thing. The one (minor) flaw I found with Siegel's work is that it is sometimes fairly laborious reading, but in thoroughly covering a subject as complex as this one I believe that's to be expected. Overall, Siegel's work leaves the impression of no stone left unturned. Calling his research data selective to me makes no sense-he's not touting Altria or any other stock, but rather showing why, over the last 50 or so years, such companies have done as well as they have. He's not even really selling a method per se-the "buy the Dogs of the Dow" approach has been around for a long time, and telling investors to seek the best S & P companies according to certain criteria is also nothing new. Were he recommending specific stocks moving forward I'd give the data mining argument some thought, but as he's not I'd have to say that, all in all, his research is fair and objective. Summary: |
| A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness
Publisher: Plume |
||
| ISBN: 0452281903 List Price: $12.00 Amazon Price: $9.24 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: A Man Named Dave I found this book to be well written and an excellent example of how it is possible to turn your own life around if you have the will power to do so.The previouse two books in the trilogy have to be read to fully understand the strength of character that Dave Pelzer must have. Summary: Excellent book(make sure ya read the first two!) This book by Dave Pelzer was by far the best book I have read. He mixed great wording and tear-jerking events to keep the reader flippin' pages. The boy who went through so much as a child just to be able to call himself Dave has risen out of the shadows of abuse, not only to write about abuse, but also how to prevent and conquer it. Dave Pelzer is an inspiration to all of us, and I would recommend this book to anyone! But make sure you read the first two ("A child called It" and "The Lost Boy"). Summary: Best One This story is about a man who went through an abusive childhood, foster care, and a bad marriage and he is still standing tall. The man's name is Dave Pelzer. When he grows up he goes to the air force, and is underappreciated. His drunkened father dies. He gets an apartment, and he meet a woman named, Patsy. They get married, and have a kid named Stephan. These guys all of a sudden have a rocky road to divorce. Dave finally stands up to his drunkened abusive mother, and says some pretty deep things. Dave's days lightens with his new lady named Marsha. This is a good , no wait I mean great book. In my opinion, this is the best one. You might want to read the other two books,("A Child Called It","The Lost Boy") before this one. Summary: |
| The Leadership Moment: Nine True Stories of Triumph and Disaster and Their Lessons for Us All
Publisher: Three Rivers Press |
|
| ISBN: 0812932307 List Price: $14.00 Amazon Price: $10.78 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: I did not receive the book, although I did read someone elses copy I did not receive the book. I have advise you of this and will tell my credit card company to reverse the charge. I did read some of this book courtesey of a friend, and it was very good. I was sorry not to have received it so I can finish reading it. Summary: Good leadership examples Many of the examples used in this book are excellent case studies for leadership workshops and classes. It was a nice variety of examples from different sectors and industries. Summary: Great leadership stories! As part of an assignment for a Leadership/Small Group Communication course, I was directed to select the book of my choice from an Amazon book search under the topic of leadership. After poring through the descriptions of just a few of the 116,000 books in this category, I quickly identified the type of book I was looking for. I wanted something less academic/theoretical and more real life. I figured any lessons on leadership would be easier to grasp if they accompanied the stories of real people. Michael Useem's The Leadership Moment: Nine True Stories of Triumph and Disaster and Their Lessons for Us All fit the bill. The Leadership Moment is a book of nine stories of real individuals who were faced with leadership challenges or put into positions where their decisions as leaders would greatly affect the outcome or survival of companies, countries and often, many other lives. The stories cover attempts to cure disease, retreating from a fire, returning a malfunctioning spacecraft to earth, ascending a mountain, leading men to battle, restructuring large corporations, the downfall and rise of a large company, working towards development of women in the third world and ending a civil war. Each story identifies a leader put into a critical do or die situation where their decisions and leadership qualities either led to success and meeting objectives, or led to failure and the demise of the company or death of those they were leading. What I really liked about the book was the real life examples and the vast range of examples that Useem used. While many of us in the corporate world identify leadership as the ability to bring in financial returns or climb the corporate ladder, this book shows how leadership comes up in vastly different situations. Useem's writing style flows well and is easy to follow. The stories are interesting and descriptive. For each story, he points out several leadership objectives that are implicated in the story. I enjoyed the book, and was able to identify how some of his leadership objectives could apply to my own career. I recommend this book to anyone looking for an interesting read on leadership. Summary: |
| American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (Vintage)
Publisher: Vintage |
|
| ISBN: 0375726268 List Price: $17.95 Amazon Price: $11.67 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A Man Much Bigger Than His Warts To describe this book as a politically motivated rehabilitation of Oppenheimer makes one think that the reviewer just didn't read the book. Indeed, the power of this book is its utterly warts on presentation of Oppenheimer which permits as objective an assessment of the man as one could ever hope to read. Examples? The authors describe Oppenheimer's emotional instability as a youth, well into his twenties, culminating in an affair in which Oppeheimer intentionally placed a fellow scholar's life at risk of poisoning, either as a result of murderous intent, or minimally criminal recklessness. Later the authors document unrelentingly Oppenheimer's preening, and when he finally made it big in Washington, his all too frequent willingness to accomodate the political ideas of the influential politicians around him. Lesser warts include his name dropping ("George thinks...." in reference to George C. Marshall) among friends who knew him before he "made it." The litany includes his own infidelity, his wife's border-line (?) alcoholism, the dysfunction in his own family, resulting in estrangement of his wife from his son, and later his daughter's suicide. How could inclusion of all of this have escaped even the most distracted reader? When the book failed to appear in the five or so years expected, and dragged out another two decades, the New York Review of Books writes: "Not everyone was surprised; historians of the subject, a small gossiping group, suggested that Sherwin was the latest victim of the curse of Oppenheimer, whose genius was tainted by a mean-spirited streak. Aspiring biographers, it was said, came to loathe the company of the man and dropped their projects." Loathe? Not typically associated with uncritical praise. So if there is so much that's offensive, what possibly could hold a reader's attention for 600+ pages? Brilliance. The authors, yes, but much, much more so their subject. You don't need to know any physics to read this (altho the "each action, equal and opposite reaction" idea is useful for the politics) . Oppenheimer was the classic Renaissance man. A scientist. A lingust. A poet. A horseman. A sailor. A politician. A leader. An outdoorsman. A lover of women and wine, if not song. A citizen. And, yes, a leader of men. The fact that he accepted the description of himself in the thirties as a "fellow traveler" is an admission of no more than he reacted as would any informed and civilized man to Hitler's persecution of Jews, the fascist takeover in Spain, the vast unemployment of the depression, and other obvious human suffering. Was his wife married at one point to and herself a "commie." Yes, and her first husband died heroically fighting Franco in Spain. Was his brother a "commie" too. Admittedly, and without apology. But there is no evidence whatsoever -- and the prosecution has had half a century to find it -- that Robert Oppenheimer, his wife or his brother ever betrayed his country. And not for want of an opportunity to investigate. To be sure, the FBI tapped his homes, his offices, chased him all over the globe, and -- most outrageously -- even bugged his lawyer's office and daily fed the results to Oppenheimer's prosecutors as his star chamber trial at the Atomic Energy Commission proceeded. He was bugged so much he commented, perhaps with ironic intent, but probably accurately, that the government spent more money bugging him than they paid him to build the bomb. Oppenheimer is, in hindsight, blessed to have had such repulsive enemies -- Teller, the self-promoting wannabe father of the H bomb, sells out Oppenheimer behind closed doors and fawns before him in public. AEC Chairman, and Princeton Trustee Lewis Strauss, converts petty personal revenge to public policy in retaliation for Oppenheimer's public arrogance, condescension and gratuitous personal slights towards him. Gordon Gray, judge of the AEC security board presiding over Oppeheimer, acquiesces to a corrupt prosecutor's ongoing ex parte pre-trial contacts with him and the other judges, only one of whom dissented (despite his own personal distaste for Oppenheimer). Hoover's unrelenting, and totally illegal, FBI wiretaps overwhelm. It is perhaps the reader's revulsion at his enemies that allows us to accept Oppenheimer's complexity, genius and warts, with equanimnity, and makes the reader, at the end, stand in something approaching awe, both of him and at the story just told. For that, the authors deserve our unequivocal thanks. Summary: Those who do not remember the past are forced to repeat it I remember Hiroshima. I remember the fright: mankind now had a weapon that could end mankind--and somebody just might press the button and do it. Oppenheimer knew this melodramatic, over-exaggerated factoid was, unfortuneately, not an exaggeration. Knew there was no safety in bigger and deadlier weapons, and that the world had to disarm--put the nuclear genie back in the bottle and keep it there.. The story of how and why Oppenheimer was ridiculed, silenced and finally hounded to death is a true horror story and an important tale to know. Especially now--with the arms race heating up again, disarmament thought of as only for wimps, and with countries not the only ones who want their own collection of nukes.. Summary: Stunning! The book haunted me on many levels. I was fascinated with the man himself - his brilliance, his character flaws, his personal magnetism. His story reads like great fiction. But the clear picture of actual events leading up to Hiroshima is stunning! It unmasks an arrogant and insular Truman who chose to drop the bomb simply to demonstrate U.S. might. Had he and his surrounding military listened to Oppenheimer's warnings, the Cold War might have been softened considerably or avoided altogether. Summary: |
| The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else
Publisher: Basic Books |
||
| ISBN: 0465016154 List Price: $16.95 Amazon Price: $11.02 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 1 Reviews: Summary: The elephant in the capitalist room Let me see if I have got this right? The only way to organize the economy is the capitalist way? That way we all gain? OK the bosses of Nike, McDonalds, and Wal-Mart will gain a bit more than us ordinary folk, but our little boats will rise with the flowing tide? Sounds good: who would want to be the party pooper?! Well someone's got to be, and for the simple reason that we don't live on a planet the size of Jupiter. The oil's finite: we know that but can't be bothered to act on it. Even the supply of water is turning out to be finite: the south east of England is on a collision course between an expanding population and a diminishing supply of water. OK, they could ship it in from the rest of the UK where there's no problem, but for reasons that don't quite add up that's not possible. It's not the corporate solution, if you will forgive the pun. Has it occurred to anyone, I wonder, if it's capitalist-driven growth which is at the heart of the upcoming problems? Yes, I know Marx and Stalin don't offer any fixes, but at some point along the way the problem is going to have to be faced: growth is going to wind-down whether we like it or not. Summary: Several important points, but de Soto oversells and is mind-numbingly repetitive De Soto fundamentally argues that the reason poor countries are poor is because they have bad property rights: it's incredibly difficult for poor people (specifically, recent urban migrants) to get legal title to their land. As a result, the poor make "extralegal" arrangements, squatting on and using land that neighbors (but not the government) recognize as theirs. But because they don't own the land, they can't get a mortgage on their house to start a business, electricity and water companies are less likely to reliably provide services, the government has difficulty taxing them because they don't have a legal address, and so on. And so on. It's a very important point but de Soto oversells, arguing with exaggerated (and oft-repeated) ideological claims but weak empirical evidence that solving this problem will actually enrich the poor. He occasionally shares insights from his interesting field work. For example, he has helped businesses in Peru to navigate the overwhelming bureaucracy and become legal, and he has found that most businesses would rather be legal and pay taxes than be illegal and pay bribes: a useful bit of empirical information, but those gems appear all too occasionally. Before reading this entire book, I recommend going to the website of de Soto's foundation (the Institute for Liberty and Democracy at www.ild.org.pe) and reading the main point there (in one tenth the words). Summary: Accessible Economics An economist's book written so regular folks can finally understand how and why capitalism is a distinctly American animal. The Mystery of Capital provides a plain-language explanation of the foundation and founding of capitalism in the US and why its export to third-world and former communist nations have, thus far, been unsuccessful. Then it outlines logical methods necessary for making capitalism accessible in any country. Excellently researched, exceptionally well-written. Summary: |
| Trial And Triumph: Stories From Church History
Publisher: Canon Press |
|
| ISBN: 1885767544 List Price: $16.00 Amazon Price: $10.40 Usually ships in 5 to 12 days |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Very interesting and well written We have used this book in our home school studies of the Middle Ages, and have loved it. The author makes the history come alive with his wonderful writing style and interesting information. We have used it alongside other books that sometimes discuss the same people in history, and this one is by far the most interesting narrative. I love it, as do my 5th and 2nd grader. We use it as a read aloud, but an older student could easily tackle it as a reader. Summary: book It was very interesting and informative. It gave us a view of what people go through to stay faithful to their belief in God Summary: False Advertising I bought this for my son to use for school reports. I had no idea it would have such an anti-Catholic bias. I thought it would encompass a more universal Christian theme. Rather, its story-telling promotes an agenda highly critical of Catholicism. It lacks objectivity. I plan to give this book away to a Protestant friend. Summary: |
| Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph
Publisher: Anchor |
|
| ISBN: 0385418957 List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $12.97 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: One of the best books ever written! I first read this book in the early 1960s and because of it T. E. Lawrence became my favorite author. And after all of these years he still is. It's not a frivolous book; the writing does demand your attention and effort. The book is full of adventure, humor, history, analysis, and biographical insight of Lawrence and the Arabs and their life. And as other reviewers have noted, much of this book helps people understand the Arabic situation today. No writer has ever provided a better psychological analysis or been more clear and honest about his strengths and weaknesses than T.E. Lawrence himself. Read what he wrote before you read what others have written. A number of good reviews of this book have already been written here so I won't repeat their commentary. Just let me say that to really understand this book, it does help to have a useful background about TEL and his life. "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" represents only a couple of the early years in his adult life, yet those years strongly impact the rest of his life in many ways(approximately another 15 years). And, conversely, it's also true that the life he led after his Arabian adventure influenced the way he told the story of his experiences. The quickest way for readers to acquire this necessary background is to visit "TELawrence.net," a web site dedicated to placing all of T. E. Lawrence's writings online. The full text and publishing history of "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" and his other books, translations, and writings are there, as are approximately 700 of his letters, with many more to be added. It brings together in a searchable website all of T.E. Lawrence's published works and letters that went out of British copyright on 1 January 2006. In addition, UK copyright still covers writings by Lawrence that were first published after January 1, 1956. While the text of these writings cannot be posted, this site will tell you what they are, where to find them, and will identify them; each cite will include page references in the chronological and alphabetical contents lists. Summary: no ordinary effort `Lawrence of Arabia's' oddly-titled book is a worthy read that most people know by the stunning movie that made its central figure a household name. Before or after seeing the movie, this intriguing written chronicle of T.E. Lawrence's efforts to mold the Arabs of the Hejaz (part of today's Saudi Arabia) into a force that would throw off yoke of the Ottoman Turks and so break the weakest link of the First World War's Central Powers offers a beguiling peak into the mind of one of the twentieth century's most enigmatic figures. We may never know how much of Lawrence's description of his outsider-insider role among the desert Arabs reflects fact and how much is fiction. No matter. He has written a fine piece of literature even if one grants him only the most tenuous link with events as they happened. This reviewer tends to concede Lawrence rather more than the minimum, as to find a little too detailed the revisionist literature that casts him in bohemian post. Recent East-meets-West events in the Middle East lend Seven Pillars an aspect of déjà vu. Nine decades before American Special Forces were organizing the Kurds to harass the Baghdad government, Lawrence was working in an unofficial theatre of Britain's Mediterranean war, prodding the quarrelsome tribes to rise up in a sufficiently organized manner so as to break the Ottoman Empire's southeastern front and ease General Allenby's march through Palestine and Syria. Then as too recently in our time, promises made by the regnant empire were not kept after the important risks had been taken. The Arabs got Damascus' glories back from the Turks and relegated that empire to relative obscurity. However, for reasons that had as much to do with lack of political vision among Arab leaders as with promises that Britain had made to Europe's Jews in its Balfourian moment and jostling by Britain and France for Middle Eastern supremacy, the Arabs never fulfilled the grand vision of pan-Arab unity and self-determination. Lawrence claims to know that they never would. So, the reticence he feels about his `great fraud' grows as the Arab revolt accumulates victories even as it becomes ever more clear that they would not become more than convenient ancillaries of the victorious Brits. In the midst of these geopolitical abstractions, Lawrence writes poignantly of those Arabs who have become his fellow travelers. Never quite becoming one of them, he nonetheless depicts his extraordinary role as a quasi-Westerner among them. Readers who have found some such entrance into an adoptive culture will both grimace and chuckle at the author's ironic comments upon the occasional British comrade-in-arms who joins him in the desert without exercising his ability to understand that the Arabs are his hosts rather than his subjects. At a time when Western men in arms and men in armchairs--not to mention women in both--need as much as ever to comprehend that they are not the first to sketch out a future for the Arabs, Lawrence's classic is worth a dust-off and an enjoyable read. The news or your Arabic-speaking neighbor may look different when you lay down Seven Pillars--whatever its proportions of fact and fiction--and focus again. Summary: Excellent Perspective I wanted something that was relevant to events in the Arab world in a context that I could understand. Aljazeera comes in English, it is plain enough to read, but I'm afraid I don't really understand it. I was looking for an understanding of the background of people native to Arab parts of the world with a focus on an audience that matched my demographic. What was it that lead up to this point? What things are familiar to these people? What things are taboo? What do they want? These are things I want to know. Certainly most people have seen the movie. The movie is not why I read the book. I read it because it is a journal of an English man who was said to have "gone native" in the Arab world at a critical moment in its history. I felt I could relate to this man. To this end, the book illustrates the perspective very well. I should not have been surprised that in the editions 600 or so pages that the story from the movie was a rather embellished minor episode in the book. There were many long treks across the desert in the book, not just one. The book is very well illustrated. There are many drawings of people in the book. My only thought about the effort to include so many drawings is that there could have been a better map. Most of the book has to do with going from one place to another. It is a war story after all. I found myself looking for maps on Google. My personal analysis is that the Arab history of this time places a fiercely independent people with strong family and tribal ties into a situation with the outside world lacking these benefits and encumberments. They did not appear to be nations as much as tribes and individuals. This thread at least still seems to be true to a degree. On the other hand, an outside man who was willing to adopt the dress, language and customs of the Arab world did quite well in securing trust and cooperation. It is clear to me that there is common ground. The Arab revolt during WWI was a struggle for freedom and recognition. Everyone wants that, so it makes a good story. Summary: |
| home |