A valuable tool for understanding the Middle East and global politics, this innovative and information-packed volume combines clear, analytical text with full-color maps and graphics to provide a comprehensive and accessible guide to the region today. As Western powers attempt to redraw the map of the region, Dan Smith uses his forensic skills to unravel this arena of confrontation and instability. With customarily acute analysis, he highlights key issues and maps their global implications to explain why the Middle East has become, and will remain, the focal point for international relations. Smith includes historical maps that show the making of the contemporary region as we recognize it today, as well as an original risk assessment that gauges the future of the Middle East and its implications for the world at large.
Concise summaries that made logical connections between events that I had not made on my own (a-ha! moments). It assumes a general familiarity with the conflicts and political players, since the summaries are brief and short of detail. It is more about connections and patterns, with data to back up arguments. Great graphics, maps, and charts to make comparisons and illustrate concepts. Just a few hours, and I have a deeper understanding of the Middle East. (I know - there's an ocean's depth of complexity, but this will at least get you below the surface of day to day news.) The author is British, which made me realize how American many of my perceptions of events are (I know - I shouldn't be surprised). That in itself made it an interesting read.
A neat reference for anyone interested in the Middle East. I think there's a lot of good information and a lot of diagrams that in some ways explain better than a traditional textbook. On the other hand, if you're looking for a comprehensive history or more than a cursory overview, this isn't the best book for it. I found some of the text to be overly brief, just because it tries to cover so much history in so few pages. (It says 140 pages, but at least half of almost every page is diagrams, maps, and charts.)
This is not a comprehensive review of the region by any means, however, it is a very good place to start for immediate, general understanding. Something so complex as the people and places of the Middle East takes years of study, but with this book, the every day reader gets an easy introduction to the history, culture, economics, and government of the individual countries.
Wow. I learned so much from this easy to read and understand book. I seriously could not wait to read it everyday which I did first thing every morning while having coffee on the front deck. It was a part of this summer I won't forget.
Though the book needs an update regarding the current state of the Middle East, it works pretty well as a "big picture" snapshot of the region. The first two sections of the book, history of the region and arenas of conflict, are the strongest. The maps and timelines are nicely laid out and easy to read.