James Barr has worked in politics, at the Daily Telegraph, in the City, at the British Embassy in Paris, and is currently a visiting fellow at King's College, London. He read modern history at Oxford has travelled widely in the Middle East. His previous book, A Line in the Sand, is also available from Simon & Schuster. He lives with his wife and two children in south London.
'With superb research and telling quotations, Barr has skewered the
whole shabby story...The convulsion of that fateful line in the
sand are still being felt today - not only in the Middle East, but
throughout the world'
*The Times*
'Racy... [Barr] is right to assert that few British readers grasp
the ferocity of Anglo-French antagonism in the Levant'
*Sunday Times*
'One of the unexpected responses to reading this masterful study is
amazement at the efforts the British and French each put into
undermining each other'
*The Spectator*
'The very grubby coalface of foreign policy...I found the entire
book most horribly addictive'
*Independent*
'Lively and entertaining. He has scoured the diplomatic archives
and has come up with a rich hail that brings his narrative to
life'
*Financial Times*
'James Barr's history of imperial machinations in the Middle East
offers a revelatory slant on the continuing crisis in that area...
an outstanding piece of research and a damning take on what stoked
current Middle Eastern woes'
*Metro*
'James Barr has succeeded better than any author before him in
telling the fascinating story of Anglo-French rivalries in the
modern Middle East... Outstanding'
*Eugene Rogan, author of 'The Arabs: A History*
'The book resembles a gripping spy thriller...an expertly
researched and authoritative book that is easy to read'
*Military Times*
'Barr is particularly good at identifying and portraying officials
and agents engaged in these tit-for-tat reprisals that blurred the
distinction between patriotism and crime'
*Literary Review*
'Engaging and well-researched... James Barr's lively account
provides some quite astounding sketches of bluster, bickering and
bravado'
*BBC History Magazine*
The struggle between Britain and France for mastery of the Middle
East between 1914 and the late 1940s, is analysed by James Barr in
his excellent new book. It is a complex story of intrigue and
skulduggery, which Barr pieces together in a deft, well-written
narrative. A journalist by profession, he manages to bring the
whole subject alive through a series of well-chosen details and
characters'
*History Today*
'History at its meticulously researched and addictive
best'
*Dublin Review of Books*
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