Review
------
"This work is the last word on the history of
Afghanistan and I have no hesitation in recommending it."--Chris
Wyatt, University of Birmingham, author of "Afghanistan in the
Defence of Empire"
"This impressive book results from Lee's professional lifetime's
work in Afghanistan. Lee uses his command of Persian, an
abundance of British and American archival sources, and a
critical historiographical approach to provide readers with a
refreshingly original of Afghanistan's modern political
history. Lee's book combines nuanced attention to the dynamic
variety of regional, religious, and tribal identities, loyalties,
alliances, and resources within Afghanistan, while also
constructively engaging the diverse and changing constellation of
external actors, agencies, and pressures in this new history of
Afghanistan."--Shah Mahmoud Hanifi, James Madison University
"An epic achievement: at once a model of clarity, accuracy, and
balance and a testament to Lee's learning and life-long erudition
in Afghan primary sources. Authoritative and remarkably
comprehensive, it deserves to become the standard
English-language history of Afghanistan."--William Dalrymple
"This is the most comprehensive available history of power and
politics in Afghanistan, from the medieval period to the present.
The narrative spans a millennium of history, from the Ghaznavids
to Ashraf Ghani. It deliberately locates the roots of modern
Afghanistan in the succession of Muslim entities that developed
power, government, and civilization in northern India
and on either side of the Hindukush. There are detailed
s of issues from the 'classical' right up to
contemporary Afghan affairs which includes the consequences of
aid to the anti-Soviet mujahideen, the roots of the Taliban
movement, the inadequacy of the Bonn Agreement as a basis for
peace, Islamic identity and the state, and militarization of
humanitarian assistance and governance reform and corruption.
This work is an encyclopaedia of the ways in which the past helps
shape the ideas and possibilities of the present."--Michael
Semple, Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace,
Security, and Justice, Queen's University Belfast
"A comprehensive history of a storied nation held together by an
alliance of tribal and political groups that threatens to
dissolve at any moment. . . . Anyone seeking to understand a
complex, even bewildering part of the world will benefit from
Lee's careful account."--Kirkus Reviews
"The task of crafting a coherent narrative out of such disparate
material, much less making that narrative of genuine interest, is
obviously daunting, and one of the many low-key marvels of this
book is how often Lee manages to succeed. This has every
indication of being the twenty-first century's standard
English-language history of Afghanistan: it's richly detailed but
not simplified, keeping up a fast pace without ever sacrificing
fine-grained detail, fit to occupy the same shelf as Abbas
Amanat's magisterial 2017 history of Iran . . . Afghanistan is a
parade of richly-realized personalities: sultans, colonial
rtunists, visionaries, and the embattled present government
figures are all presented here with a startlingly refreshing
humanity."--National
"An exhausting march. . . . Lee has spent a lifetime studying
this troubled region, and his account of Afghanistan's history is
almost dizzying in its power shifts and conflicts. . . . [An]
epic story."--Washington Independent Review of Books
"Lee's well-written book is rich in rewarding detail and will be
essential reading for anyone interested in the history of
Afghanistan."--History Today
About the Author
----------------
Jonathan L. Lee is a social and cultural historian and
a leading authority on the history of Afghanistan. His previous
books include The `Ancient Supremacy', Bukhara, Afghanistan and
the Battle for Balkh, 1732-1901 (1996) and Amazing Wonders of
Afghanistan (2014).