This is not a book to be ignored ... [a] digestible history of the restless region [and] a useful alternative to academic tracts
- Richard Spencer, The Times
A balanced, sweeping, hugely ambitious work that delves into the long and tangled roots of the modern Middle East
Literary Review
Impressive ... a highly readable, lovingly researched, romantic and engaging history
Spectator
Brilliant
- Anita Anand, Empire
A tour de force. One of the best summary histories of Islam I have come across. Informative, engaging, and excitingly written
- Ghada Karmi, author, In Search of Fatima
A masterly engagement with the most delicate and important of subjects - filled with gentle empathy, learning and rare balance
- Rory Stewart,
Rogerson is an original - eloquent and always fascinating
- William Dalrymple,
A lucid, vivid and sweeping history of the divisions within Islam and their destructive impact on the contemporary Muslim world. Barnaby Rogerson takes you to the heart of the arguments and battles, revealing some stark truths. This is history as a living entity. A dazzling achievement
- Ziauddin Sardar, author, In Search of Mecca
Rogerson is a master storyteller, equally at home sketching the intimacies of the Prophet's household as he is illuminating geopolitical trends across the world of contemporary Islam
- Matthew Teller, author, Nine Quarters of Jerusalem
Rogerson knows that things are much more complex than Sunni versus Shia. But in its depiction of the multiple cats' cradles of tensions, The House Divided is jauntily readable and thought-provoking about a Middle East still in the middle of global crises, and still, as so often, misunderstood
- Tim Mackintosh-Smith, author, Arabs: A 3,000-Year History of Peoples, Tribes and Empires
Praise for Barnaby Rogerson
:
Rogerson has a novelist's gift for filling out the characters of his main players
- Noel Malcolm,
Rogerson is an excellent story-teller
- Norman Stone,
Remarkable - Barnaby Rogerson has succeeded in isolating all the different strands of North African history
- John Julius Norwich,
Rogerson is eccentric and eclectic but always iconoclastic. He is not afraid to explore and elucidate the recondite in a way a more formal academic would not
- Ross Leckie,