The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11
by Lawrence Wright
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
Any American
What a great surprise this book was. I first read about The Looming Tower (the title comes from the Koranic verse Osama bin Laden used as a coded message to the 9/11 hijackers) in a number of political op/ed columns. Finally, though, it was conservative writer Jonah Goldberg's heavy reliance on The Looming Tower for an L.A. Times column that sen...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
sunday morning news junkies
holy crap.
this book is a tough read on many fronts, the least of which is trying to keep track of who the perpetrators are given that they change or add names each time they become a parent or become a member of a new tribe. the author includes a handy character guide to assist in drawing your own org chart of al-qaeda. the tone and subject matter is very academic, but i thought wright did a great job of giving a thorough history of the extremists while keeping the reader engaged by writin...more
this book is a tough read on many fronts, the least of which is trying to keep track of who the perpetrators are given that they change or add names each time they become a parent or become a member of a new tribe. the author includes a handy character guide to assist in drawing your own org chart of al-qaeda. the tone and subject matter is very academic, but i thought wright did a great job of giving a thorough history of the extremists while keeping the reader engaged by writin...more
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non-fiction
Read in May, 2008
*Draft*
Let’s all be honest right at the beginning: my knowledge of the Middle East before reading The Looming Tower was primarily founded upon Persepolis, The Kite Runner, and flash moments of news jargon (usually drowned out by my rants) from accidental mis-clicks to Fox News or CNN. Televised news and myself have not been on friendly terms since around the year 2000.
Before reading this book, I was peripherally aware of the Muslim religion, the Middle East’s tr...more
Let’s all be honest right at the beginning: my knowledge of the Middle East before reading The Looming Tower was primarily founded upon Persepolis, The Kite Runner, and flash moments of news jargon (usually drowned out by my rants) from accidental mis-clicks to Fox News or CNN. Televised news and myself have not been on friendly terms since around the year 2000.
Before reading this book, I was peripherally aware of the Muslim religion, the Middle East’s tr...more
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Wright's Pulitzer Prize winning history of modern Islamic extremism and the fight to stop it should be essential reading to a public and decision makers who seem ignorant of the causes, motivations and background of America and the West's enemies. What makes this book a great read is how the sheer level of detail has been turned into a page turner, with one revelation piling on another. It is an extremely well-researched book.
Wright follows the growth of modern Islamic extremism from Sayed Q...more
Wright follows the growth of modern Islamic extremism from Sayed Q...more
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non-fiction
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
People interested in current events
This book tells the story of Osama bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri and the founding of al Qaeda. The narrative is compelling and the book is obviously well researched. I particularly appreciated the parts of the book that provided insight into the backgrounds and day-to-day lives of the jihadists and their families.
My only substantive complaint about the book -- and it is a fairly significant problem for me -- is the lack of footnoting and citation. Even newspaper articles provide more inform...more
My only substantive complaint about the book -- and it is a fairly significant problem for me -- is the lack of footnoting and citation. Even newspaper articles provide more inform...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
anybody.
The author spent five years interviewing people throughout the Middle East and United States, examining the events leading up to September 11th, 2001, and portions of this book have appeared in The New Yorker over the past couple of years. The overall book is a rare combination of gripping story-telling and thoughtful perspective.
Where the book really shines is the personal, political and religious insight that it gives into motivations of the terrorists, as well as the American bu...more
Where the book really shines is the personal, political and religious insight that it gives into motivations of the terrorists, as well as the American bu...more
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Read in March, 2008
This book written by Lawrence Wright, a journalist for the New Yorker, tries to explain how and why 9/11 happened. It starts with a short biography of one of the fathers of Islamic fundamentalism, Sayyid Qutb, and then moves on to biographic chapters on Ahmed Zawahiri and Osama bin Laden, the powers behind al-Qaeda. From there, the book covers al-Qaeda and its associated groups from the Afghan war against the Soviets in the 1980s until September 11, 2001. Wright also spends some time discussi...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in April, 2007
Wow. Wright's account is everything I was hoping it would be and more. I saw him on Charlie Rose a few months ago, promoting the one-man show he created about conducting the research for the Looming Tower (My Trip to Al-Qaeda) and was instantly impressed. Wright strips away all the talking head nonsense of mainstream media and gives us an honest, exceptionally well-researched account of the events in recent Middle East history that contributed to the formation of al-Qaeda, as well as a damning a...more
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2007
Read in September, 2007
The Pulitzer Prize Winner for Nonfiction in 2007, Looming Tower is authored by the New Yorker's Lawrence Wright. The book focuses primarily on the rise of Bin Laden and Zawahiri, who Wright paints as the strategic operations behind Bin Laden's charisma and passion. Wright provides an exhaustive and well-written chronicle of the ups and downs in Bin Laden's Al-Qaeda organization. Most interesting is the number of times the Al-Qaeda organization faced near extinction, only to rebound with enough s...more
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Read in June, 2007
This is the most affecting book I've read in a long time.
I grew up in the Reagan era cynical and distrustful of the government, and became more distrustful as I watched the Bush administration and Rudolph Giuliani exploit 9-11 for political and personal gain.
This book detailing the bureaucratic pettiness and jealousies that erased any possibility of our government stopping the attacks actually restored some of my faith in the government. It reminded me that there are good people working to k...more
I grew up in the Reagan era cynical and distrustful of the government, and became more distrustful as I watched the Bush administration and Rudolph Giuliani exploit 9-11 for political and personal gain.
This book detailing the bureaucratic pettiness and jealousies that erased any possibility of our government stopping the attacks actually restored some of my faith in the government. It reminded me that there are good people working to k...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
Those who watched the towers fall
Look, I avoid just about any book that has anything to do with al Qaeda, 9/11, or the Taliban. I don't want to hear yet another vindictive rant about "what should have happened" or how "religion is destroying the world." But I'm really glad my friends convinced me to read Wright's book.
First of all, this book is one first-rate piece of journalism. Wright draws on dozens of interviews and hundreds of sources to put together this obviously well-researched book. It's worth r...more
First of all, this book is one first-rate piece of journalism. Wright draws on dozens of interviews and hundreds of sources to put together this obviously well-researched book. It's worth r...more
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current-events
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
idiots who think 9/11 was an inside job.
If you want to know the origins and extent of the violent Islamic jihad against America, this book is a must. By now there are dozens of books about radical Islam, but this is the standard-bearer, going back to the 1930s to trace the beginning of this murderous aspect of the "religion of peace."
And for those who doubt we are engaged in a war against radical Islam, I'll just quote the commander of the Islamist army, Osama bin Ladin, referring in his 1996 "Declaration of War Ag...more
And for those who doubt we are engaged in a war against radical Islam, I'll just quote the commander of the Islamist army, Osama bin Ladin, referring in his 1996 "Declaration of War Ag...more
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Read in July, 2007
Another great narrative non-fiction book. Wright really gets to the heart of Al-Qaeda, specifically its leaders and predecessors. The most suprising thing, to me, about these radical Muslim leaders, is that their hatred for the West, according to Wright, stems more from a moral indignation than politics. I always shuddered when I heard the neocons say that "They hurt us because they hate the way we live." It turns out that may have more truth to it than I thought.
"The Loom...more
"The Loom...more
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Read in February, 2008
"Wherever you are, death will find you. Even in the looming tower."
This incredibly engaging and comprehensive account of the events leading up to September 11, 2001, takes its eerie title from the 4th sura of the Koran. As if that isn't chilling, in and of itself, a video found after the attacks, revealed that bin Laden recited these words as the hijackers geared up for their suicide missions that would change the course of history within seconds of their impact.
Author Lawrence...more
This incredibly engaging and comprehensive account of the events leading up to September 11, 2001, takes its eerie title from the 4th sura of the Koran. As if that isn't chilling, in and of itself, a video found after the attacks, revealed that bin Laden recited these words as the hijackers geared up for their suicide missions that would change the course of history within seconds of their impact.
Author Lawrence...more
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Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
those who want to better understand nature of terrorism
Looming Tower is a very readable and engaging overview of events and characters leading to 9/11. Whether we like it or not, terrorism will in many ways define the world we live in for many years to come. The book gave me a much better understanding of al-Qaeda’s history, motivations and operations. One of the surprises of the book is Osama bin Laden, whom I did not know much about previously. He comes off as an extremely unimpressive character and somewhat of a loser: he squandered his fat...more
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Read in October, 2007
This was the most definitive book I've seen to date on the events leading to 9/11. It spans fifty years, back to Sayyid Qutb, the Egyptian scholar credited with founding the modern Islamist movement. The focus of the story, however, is Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri. The book traces their lives and shows how particular events and perspectives molded the fledgling and unfocused al-Qaeda (whose most confrontational activity used to be its internal soccer games) into an organization capabl...more
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Read in April, 2008
I'm not usually into non-fiction, but I decided to give this one a try after seeing an article about it in the newspaper. I guess you could call this a biography of Al-Qaeda and the circumstances leading to its ascent to number one terrorist organization in the world. It humanized many people who have been made both monsters and heroes by we, who were attacked. I must say that early on, before their radicalization (is that really a word??) I agreed with a lot, but certainly not all, of the ideas...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to Carolyn by:
Annetterecommends it for: everyone
Keep a notebook handy, you're gonna need it.
This book was so confusing I had to draw a chart while reading it to keep the characters straight. There are so many men doing so many things and so many of these men are named Mohammed. Not all of them, though. Some of them are named Rabbani and Rahman and Ressam and Rossini. Shafiq, Soufan and Sufaat. But don't think it's confusing just because they're foreign names. If you were telling an American story with just eight principal charact...more
This book was so confusing I had to draw a chart while reading it to keep the characters straight. There are so many men doing so many things and so many of these men are named Mohammed. Not all of them, though. Some of them are named Rabbani and Rahman and Ressam and Rossini. Shafiq, Soufan and Sufaat. But don't think it's confusing just because they're foreign names. If you were telling an American story with just eight principal charact...more
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Read in July, 2008
An excellent book that gives a thorough but highly readable account of the formation of Al Qaeda, the lives of Osama bin Laden and other Islamic radicals and the events that led up to the horrific events of September 11, 2001. Wright seems to lay the lion's share of the blame for not intercepting and preventing the attack at the feet of the CIA whose turf war with the FBI trumped co-operative investigation. Had the two agencies simply worked together, Wright suggests, 9/11 might well have been p...more
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Read in September, 2007
After reading this book, I felt like I had a good grasp on how 9-11 happened from a variety of perspectives. It traces the history of Al Qaeda before it became Al Qaeda with detailed histories of its founding members. If you need an argument for why a Nation should think twice before torturing its enemies, just take a look at how that worked out for Egypt, and the rest of the world for that matter, since the majority of Al Qaeda's founding members were tortured in Egyptian prisons. Osama wasn'...more
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