Description:
'INCOMPARABLE DEPTH AND UNDERSTANDING...AND EXTRAORDINARY COURAGE' NOAM CHOMSKY
The final work from foreign correspondent Robert Fisk, picking up the story in the Middle East where his internationally bestselling The Great War of Civilisation left off, starting with the aftermath of the Iraq invasion in 2005.
Review Quotes:
'The overall effect of Fisk's present-tense historical writing--he holds a doctorate in history and is able to make deep connections between present and past--is to underscore the dangers of making too many assumptions about a much-assumed-about region ... An incisive view of the Middle East that won't please the Pentagon or veterans of the Bush and Blair administrations' Kirkus starred review
'Fisk's sobering view of the Middle East bites with truth ... A disturbing and distressing book but tragically undeniable too' Irish Examiner
'In his attentive, careful, detailed, historically grounded reporting -- and in this remarkable posthumous book, which deserves to be widely read -- the voices of people demanding freedom are given space, recognition, and dignity. This is an exemplary and deeply human work of both journalism and history' Anthony Arnove, author of Iraq: The Logic of Withdrawal
'Today as conflicts again rage in multiple countries in the Middle East, we need Robert Fisk's insight more than ever. A good deal of it can be found in the pages of this, his final book. His voice has been sorely missed in the pages of our newspapers and magazines, but even more so, in our world' Norman Stockwell, publisher of The Progressive
'Fisk's ability to evoke the Middle East's multifaceted history, delve into the details of its multiple conflicts, and expose the moral depravity and hypocrisy of Western policy towards the region has had few equals ... This posthumous volume explains why Fisk's next column was so eagerly awaited by so many, and why its absence is missed in these grim times' Mouin Rabbani, co-editor of Jadaliyya
'Legendary journalist Robert Fisk's Night of Power is essential reading to understand the full extent of the crime that was the Iraq war' Trita Parsi, Executive Vice President, Quincy Institute