'Nassar Mansour's book provides a rare opportunity to look at Arabic calligraphy from the inside through the eyes of a contemporary practitioner. It gives an engaging insight into his intellectual background and working practices, and it documents his successful attempt to revive a particularly impressive style of calligraphy.' - Tim Stanley, Senior Curator, Middle East Asian Department Victoria and Albert Museum, London; 'I've read Nassar's text with pleasure and interest and illumination: before starting it, I couldn't have defined muhaqqaq to save my life. I also think it casts light on its peculiar suitability as a Qur'anic script. I've often been exercised by the difficulty of writing about calligraphy and inscriptions in general, not merely Islamic but Western too: the vocabulary is poor; there are insufficient technical terms; and lack of professional expertise tends to blind one to the most obvious points. Nassar is a practitioner, which gives him a head start, and his lucid exposition and mastery of the Islamic calligraphic tradition make his study of muhaqqaq a real contribution to an under-studied subject in the West.' - Michael Rogers, The Honorary Curator of the Khalili Collection, London; 'Based on a wide range of original sources, this book traces the history of muhaqqaq, the most illustrious of Arabic script styles, from its beginnings to its apogee at the height of the Ottoman Empire. The presentation is enriched by the author's own experience as an eminent calligrapher in whose work this ancient style has come to new fruition. As the combined fruit of scholarship and expert craftsmanship, this book is a rarity among its kind.' - Dr. Stefan Sperl, School of Oriental and African Studies, London