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Sandra Mackey (1) (1937–2015)

Author of The Saudis: Inside the Desert Kingdom

For other authors named Sandra Mackey, see the disambiguation page.

10 Works 715 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Sandra Mackey is a veteran journalist who has written many books on the Middle East. She lives in Atlanta.

Works by Sandra Mackey

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1937
Date of death
2015-04-19
Gender
female
Education
University of Virginia
University of Central Oklahoma
Occupations
journalist
non-fiction author
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

6 reviews
Mackey really packs a lot into such a short (266-page) book. It was published in 2010, btw. It's history, popular history, but she writes like a journalist, imho. She's obviously been immersed in the region for a very long time. For readers looking for a summary of the 15-year civil war, here it is, complete with historical context going back to Phoenecia, the Ottoman Empire, betrayal of the Arabs by the French and British, the nonsensical geographical boundaries, impact of Palestinian show more influx and on and on.

The chapter on the history Palestine was especially sharp--and who hasn't already read a lot about the plight of the Palestinians?

Reading through the whole civil war is a haul all right. But once you get a grasp of all the different actors--Maronites, other Christians, Shiites, Sunnis, Druze, leftists, PLO, Hezbollah, Israelis ...well, you know they're going to be shifting alliances, so you can skip to 1989 and find ... the most influential figures in Lebanon--whether rich business families or leaders of religious factions--are still unwilling to give up the powers necessry to create the kind of institutions that constitute a modern state.

Despite the veneer of modernity prior to 1975 (and since the the end of the war) this is still a tiny makeshift state run in a tribal or feudal fashion. Pretty depressing. And it would be hard enough for a state that didn't have Iran (funding Hezbollah), Palestine and Israel as neighbors.

Where I think she fails is the final chapter, reflecting the book's title, in which she argues that Lebanon is a microcosm of the issues and conflicts elsewhere in the Arab world. OK, yes, in this tiny place (7/10 the size of Connecticut!), there's nearly every community and political strain (what about Wahhabis?) found in the Arab states, but in its heyday, it was run by business families, most of them probably Christian at that. It doesn't have the problems or advantages (see Jordan) of a royal family. It doesn't have oil. Does anywhere else have such different communities packed into such a small area, so close to the sea?

Then there's the afterword, in which she brings in the extremist post 9/11 reactions in the US and the growing hostility of Islam in Europe. She probably has a lot to say about such matters, but she doesn't have enough space to say it. It feels tacked on. Skip it.
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This book had been sitting on my shelf for years and I almost donated it, thinking it would be too outdated a history (published in the mid-1980s). But I'm glad I read it instead. Since I started the book knowing almost nothing about Saudi Arabia, I learned a lot, and it piqued my interest to learn more. Some of the straight history was a bit dense, which required some patience to get through, but was still important and worth reading.

The book includes no maps, so I often looked up places show more on Google maps.

The book wasn't just a history -- it was also about the author's experiences in Saudi Arabia as a secret journalist. There were some scary, dramatic scenes that were quite hair-raising. The author was one brave woman. She has passed away now, but I would like to read more of her books, including the one about Iran.

This book has many versions on Goodreads. It was hard to figure out which version was mine. The closest was the paperback version with 433 pages.
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2275 Lebanon: Death of a Nation, by Sandra Mackey (read 10 Mar 1990) This book tells the tragic, searing story of Lebanon very well. and it covers no side with honor. Its chronology leaves something to be desired, but the book has brilliant writing and tells its awful story well. It shows American policy as naive and blundering--e.g., the New Jersey shelling of a Shiite village engendered great hatred of the US and fueled the hostage-taking which still haunts us today [1990}. Someday the show more horror of Lebanon today will end, but 1975 to 1990 has been a horrible time. The book seems so "immediate" because my son-in-law is so intimately connected with the whole period--he arrived in the US on July 4, 1979. show less
Sandra Mackey does an admirable job telling the history of Lebanon. The story focuses on the role that Lebanon has played in the confusing world of Middle East politics. This role is usually being the pawn of major world powers as well as regional ones.

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
715
Popularity
#35,475
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
6
ISBNs
28
Languages
2

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