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Bell of the Desert

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This historical novel offers an "imaginative chronicle of an extraordinary woman" whose exploits across the Middle East helped create modern-day Iraq (Kirkus Reviews).

A brilliant academic, mountaineer, explorer, linguist, politician, and towering literary figure, Gertrude Bell is the most significant unsung heroine of the twentieth century. She was the most celebrated adventurer of her day—the brains behind Lawrence of Arabia, an adviser to kings and desert sheikhs, and the British government's secret weapon in World War I in the campaign against the Turks.

Told as a biographical narrative, Alan Gold's Bell of the Desert is a meticulously researched novel that accurately recounts the ways Bell broke the mold of Victorian womanhood socially, intellectually, and physically. Her adventures across the Middle East, her influence on the men at the vanguard of history, and her unparalleled skill in guiding the diplomatic paths of the English, French, and Arab allies of the region all lead to perhaps her greatest achievement—single-handedly creating today's Iraq.

Experience the harrowing story of this extraordinary woman who most determinedly fashioned the Arab world as we know it today.

"Highly detailed historical fiction." —Kirkus Reviews

"A superb account." —Historical Novel Society
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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2014
      Gold (Bloodline, 2014, etc.) crafts highly detailed historical fiction from the unparalleled life of Gertrude Bell, English debutante-turned-explorer-turned World War I diplomatic intelligence officer.Before there was Lawrence of Arabia, there was Bell, "Daughter of the Desert," a woman of protean intelligence, political acumen and undying passion for Arabia who became a seminal figure in Arab nationalism. After her formal "coming out," Bell found prospective suitors less than her intellectual equals. Then she met Hashemite sheik Abd al-Rahman as he consulted her uncle, a British ambassador, and began to passionately explore Arabia and its culture. She often journeyed alone, a shocking decision then. Gold has Bell meet young T.E. Lawrence at an archaeological dig at Carchemish. They develop a platonic love that carries on through WWI, as the fey young scholar becomes Lawrence of Arabia. Postwar, there are political machinations, "a seething mass of distortions, contradictions, lies, evasions, prejudices, denials, and demands," as Britain and France remain blind to colonialism's impending collapse. Bell and Lawrence, albeit enamored of Arabia, were burdened by their own prejudices, perceiving Arabs as a "medieval and patronizing bunch of chauvinistic jingoists." While Gold's fact-packed narrative recounts the transition of desert fiefdoms into unstable oil-rich states wracked by tribal tensions, his character sketches are what shines-including Churchill, "a likeable, devious and somewhat untrustworthy politician," and the brilliant Faisal, third son of the Hashemite ruler of Mecca and Medina, installed as king of the Bell-created nation of Iraq. Beyond the political scheming, there's romance, literary appreciation for outsized desert vistas, acknowledgment of Arabia's intellectual contributions, illustrations of gender oppression, and a precis on the complex elements relating to Zionism and Palestine. Gold offers an interesting, imaginative chronicle of an extraordinary woman present at the creation of post-colonial Arab-Western tensions. A dense, highly detailed fictional yin to the yang of Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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