Phenomenal.
Now, my favorite military historian is Stephen Budiansky, and I've read all his books, and I'm eagerly looking forward to any future installment (like the upcoming CIA code breaking stuff).
Then, lo and behold, Jeremy Bowen joins the very top!
The writing style is amazing. Full of personal anectodes and weird stories that make for a compelling case against raw, known facts. The narrative is fast, colorful, it jumps around, it never lets you rest, and you feel like you're reading fiction rather than documentary on something that happened fifty years ago. But that's the beauty and the charm of Jeremy's talent.
Six Days (seven nights, hi hi hi hi) starts with a brief intro on the 1948 and 1956 wars, how the national consciousness of Israel and its Arab neighbors shaped thereafter, the political struggle and the military games that followed, and the mindboggling gamble that Nasser played, knowing all too well he could not really win. Facing him was the Israeli military cadre, totally confident in their ability to complete a fast, brutal conquest and having honed to perfect their skill over the previous 19 years.
The books has roughly eight chapters - the aforementioned chapter, each of the six days of the war, and the aftermath, which we live today - the divide between the East and the West, the role of the US in the Middle-Eastern politics, and the rest of it. The war story is amazing. Not just because it's a textbook execution of a military operations. Also because it tells us the motivations of the leaders, but also often tragic, highly emotional stories of ordinary people - soldiers, refugees, women and children. There's everything you can imagine, and then some - backstabbing, mistrust, theatrics, religion, Dayan's sex life, Amer's crazy illusions, King Hussein's fatalism, how Soviets tricked themselves, the radio propaganda in Cairo, Israeli diplomatic dancing with the Johnson administration, conspiracy theories. Truly fascinating, even if you know the story.
Extremely recommended - there's a bit of everything for everyone - military facts, history, personal facts, Jeremy leaves no stone unturned and no question unanswered. He gives it a closure, a symbolic meaning, and the critical connection between the past and the present. Definitely my new co-favorite author, and I'll be looking to read everything else (and if) he's written.
Igor