Book description
After 9/11, people who had never given much thought to the politics of
the Middle East found themselves wondering why there was such rage
brewing in the region. Many of them turned to Bernard Lewis for an
explanation. The world's pre-eminent historian of the Middle East, Lewis
was among the first to identify the phenomenon of Islamic
fundamentalism.
In this exceptional memoir, he looks back over his long career - taking
us from his discovery of the Crusades as a young boy in London and his
service in British intelligence during the Second World War through to
the Iraq wars, the crisis with Iran, and the great upheavals of the Arab
Spring.
Over the course of his distinguished career, he has at times been as
much a player in political events as well as a scholar. He has advised
monarchs, presidents, prime ministers and dissidents in the Middle East
and elsewhere. Now 95 and still sharper than most college students, he
writes with barbed wit about the people he has known and the events he
has witnessed and participated in. No subject is more fraught in the
Middle East than history - and so Bernard Lewis has found himself
unexpectedly part of the story that he tells in this extraordinary
memoir of a life that spans the 20th century, and has already had a
great impact on the 21st. Bernard Lewis is Emeritus Professor of Near
Eastern Studies at Princeton University. He was formerly Professor of
Middle Eastern History at the School of Oriental and African Studies in
London between 1949 and 1974.