<p>‘Anyone wanting to understand the trauma of occupied Palestine, historically, culturally and politically, should read this book.’<br />Economist</p>
<p>‘I heartily recommend this book. Fox’s assured delving has laid bare many usually obscure strata in the complex structure of the Arab-Israeli conflict. With his command of detail and pithy style, he strikes the right tone in a politically sensitive field.’<br />Andrew Lycett, Sunday Times</p>

Part travelogue, part true-thriller, Edward Fox’s brilliantly original book investigates the murder of a US archaeologist on the West Bank in 1992 and opens up the Palestinian world he served – a Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil of Palestine and the West Bank.

On 19 January 1992, Dr Albert Glock – US citizen, archaeologist and Director of Archaeology at Bir Zeit University in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, was murdered by an assassin. Two bullets to the heart. The witness statements were confused, the autopsy inadequate. The police took three hours to arrive at the scene, from their HQ ten minutes away.

Who killed Albert Glock? The Palestinians blamed the Israelis, the Israelis blamed an inter-departmental feud at the university, or extreme Palestinian groups. But those close to Bir Zeit, to the political situation on the West Bank, had a simple line of advice: 'Look to the archaeology,' they repeated. 'Look to the archaeology.'

For Albert Glock had started to uncover truths about the distant Palestinian past which Israel found uncomfortable. For Israel, Palestine was a country without a people – for a people without a country. Now Glock, through his archaeological finds, was showing that their version was flawed. He was publishing papers about the ancient traditions and settlements throughout Palestine, and discovering hugely significant facts about the ancient Palestinian way of life. Glock had given up a glittering career to teach at Palestine's beleaguered, besieged and underfunded university which faced closure at worst, and curfew at best – daily.

Edward Fox's extraordinary book weaves together the story of Glock's murder with the history of biblical archaeology and the brutal, Byzantine politics of the intifada. It is written as a true-life thriller which opens up the Palestine in which Glock lived and worked, the people he knew and the turbulent politics of the middle east. This is brilliantly original writing and compelling storytelling quite unlike any other work yet published on the Middle East.

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Part travelogue, part true-thriller, Edward Fox’s brilliantly original book investigates the murder of a US archaeologist on the West Bank in 1992 and opens up the Palestinian world he served – a Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil of Palestine and the West Bank.

Les mer

• An intense literary thriller, this is Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil set in Palestine.

• Wide media coverage.

• Possible TV documentary based on book.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780007291380
Publisert
2008-07-01
Utgiver
HarperCollins Publishers
Vekt
125 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
15 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
288

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Edward Fox is an American journalist, living in London. He has a Master’s in Islamic Studies from Columbia University and is fluent in Palestinian Arabic. He is an accomplished travel writer with a distinct anthropological bent, and his journalism has appeared in the Independent, Guardian, and Esquire. His previous book, Obscure Kingdoms, a travel book on monarchs in Tonga, Java, Nigeria, Switzerland and Oman, was published in 1993 to rave reviews.