An eyewitness testimony to the horrors of dictatorship and the devastation of war in Iraq. It is a memoir of Paul Roberts' travels in Iraq before, during and after the Gulf War, himself witnessing the casualties of the allied bombings and the tales he heard along the way.
Paul William Roberts (1950 – May 17, 2019) was a Canadian writer who spent many years in Toronto before moving to the Laurentians in Quebec upon losing his vision.
Born in Wales and educated at Exeter College, Oxford, where he gained a second in English Language and Literature, Roberts moved permanently to Canada in 1980. He lived for several years prior to this in India, where he taught at Bangalore University and studied Sanskrit at the Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi.
Given to me by a friend, rescued from a thrift store, knowing my family had lived in the area during the first Gulf War. Roberts uses Dante's "Divine Comedy" as a frame for looking at the Middle East -- specifically Saddam's Iraq just before and after the first Gulf War. He is at times hilarious (his ability to mimic accent is pretty good) and at times horrific and scary. He does a good job too of sketching a back story for much of the action. And, in the last half, as I also experienced it, the two persona (public and private) of Iraqi citizens living under Saddam. Does a good job too of detailing the West's (especially American) complicity. Hard to put down.