Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Prince of the Marshes, And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq

Label
Prince of the Marshes, And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Prince of the Marshes
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq
Summary
An adventurous diplomat's "engrossing and often darkly humorous" memoir of working with Iraqis after the fall of Saddam Hussein(Publishers Weekly). In August 2003, at the age of thirty, Rory Stewart took a taxi from Jordan to Baghdad. A Farsi-speaking British diplomat who had recently completed an epic walk from Turkey to Bangladesh, he was soon appointed deputy governor of Amarah and then Nasiriyah, provinces in the remote, impoverished marsh regions of southern Iraq. He spent the next eleven months negotiating hostage releases, holding elections, and splicing together some semblance of an infrastructure for a population of millions teetering on the brink of civil war. The Prince of the Marshes tells the story of Stewart's year. As a participant he takes us inside the occupation and beyond the Green Zone, introducing us to a colorful cast of Iraqis and revealing the complexity and fragility of a society we struggle to understand. By turns funny and harrowing, moving and incisive, it amounts to a unique portrait of heroism and the tragedy that intervention inevitably courts in the modern age
Target audience
adult
Classification
Content

Incoming Resources