War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq
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| 09-23-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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A learning experience, on the ground in Iraq. My one and only beef is that there are no maps and no pictures.
Engels, on page 327, himself admits to having a thing for maps. "When ever I want to explain the situation in Iraq, I feel compelled to draw maps." "I am also convince maps are essential to understanding the war in Iraq, which has always been more about geography, religion, and power than democracy. If you know where the Shiites, Sunnis, and the Kurds live, it's easy to understand their struggles for dominance. If you see on paper how Iran is wedged between U.S. bases in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Persian Gulf, it helps explain why Tehran's foreign policy seems so aggressive. From where Iran sits, it looks like the country is being surrounded, which it is." With this book and others I'm slowly getting an idea of what's going on over there. other books include; Nasr, Vali - The Shia Revival: How Conflicts within Islam Will Shape the Future Stewart, Rory - The Prince of the Marshes Bostom, Andrew G. - The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non- Muslims Heikal, Mohamed - Iran: The Untold Story Thesiger, Wilfred - The Last Nomad Arnove, Anthony - Iraq: the logic of withdrawal Galbraith. Peter W. - The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War Without End Indirectly Pious, Richard M. - Why Presidents Fail: White House Decision Making from Eisenhower to Bush II Ansary, Tamin Mir - West of Kabul, East of New York: Horwitz, Tony -- Baghdad without a map, and other misadventures in Arabia. fun Yahia, Mona - When the Grey beetles took over Baghdad: Fiction, but give you some what of an idea of being jewish in Bagdad '60-70 We're All Men Here by John Flanagan Fiction, but author taught for a decade in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and Iraq) (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-06 05:22:19 EST)
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| 08-25-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This book has graphic violence and can be hard to take but really gets into the war. At times I found myself thinking that this just can't possibly be true but then I thought, no one could possibly make this up. There are a lot of scary, crazy, violent people running around Iraq. And just when you think it can't possibly get any worse, it does. The author has great insights into what is going on there and he is a sympathetic character. The way he ended the book, I get the impression he thinks the current reduction in violence is just a temporary truce while all side eliminate al Queda. Then the Shiite/Sunni civil war will start up again, with the US on the side of the Shiites.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-13 08:54:23 EST)
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| 08-19-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Richard Engel makes the war in Iraq crystal clear from a number of perspectives that help the reader to understand why the war has taken the course it has over these past five years.
His commentary on the differences between the religious sects and their politics as well as their response to the regime change in Iraq and the power vacuum it created along with the subsequent attempts by all parties to fill it is most enlightening. Want to know why the Iraq war has gone the way that it did, why it is changing, and what may lie in the future? Read this book! (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-25 19:28:46 EST)
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| 08-17-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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i thoroughly enjoyed reading War Journal. Some of the chapters are really gruesome, but this is the reality of not only the war, but of human nature. One feels the emotions with Richard Engel as the war progress. I congratulate him for being such a brave soul and enduring all that he has been through. I highly recommend this book as an account of what really is happening in Iraq and not of the bias one hears in the media.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-20 03:00:55 EST)
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| 08-16-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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The personal details made this book much more interesting than just a blow-by-blow about the players and their politics. My only suggestions: 1) a map at the beginning of the book (even the author said that to explain all of this, a map was necessary) and 2) a glossary at the beginning of the book to explain some of the concepts in more detail.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-20 03:00:55 EST)
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| 08-15-08 | 3 | (NA) |
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This book is a personal account of Engels service in Iraq as an American journalist. The book goes beyond the details we see on the nightly news and exposes the gritty, painful, and sometimes gruesome aspects of covering a war. Engel, who is fluent in Arabic, is the longest serving journalist in Iraq.
Engel's knowledge of the conflict is well respected in Washington and, upon a recent return, Bush asked to meet with him to discuss his views on the war. Engel showed up with a mismatched suit and spoke frankly with the president for 90 minutes. He writes of his discussions with Bush, and the candor with which he addressed the President. He also writes about how tragic but inevitable ways in which the war affected him, his marriage, and his psyche. Speaking of the emerging civil war in Iraq, he writes, "There were fourteen car bombs, forty two roadside bombs, and twenty two shootings in Baghdad the same week. ...They were just numbers, adding up, and I was there, with my death abacus, keeping track. I didn't think I cared about the carnage. It just seemed like white noise. I didn't feel affected, but friends said I didn't look them in the eyes much anymore. I was jittery, cold, wired, hungry, and most of all detached. (p. 203) Engel eventually moved to Beirut, Lebanon, where he relished the opportunity to escape from Baghdad. The way he describes the city conjures of images of a Paris on the Mediterranean. But shortly after he arrived, a war broke out between Israel and Hezbollah. He writes, "I spent the rest of the summer reporting from destroyed villages in southern Lebanon and covering refugees in my new home. NBC's Washington bureau chief, Tim Russert, told me I was bad luck. 'Engel, don't come to Washington', he said". (p 274) (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-18 03:06:58 EST)
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| 08-07-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Engel does a fantastic job clearing explaining the religious, political, and social problems in Iraq. He talks about his experiences with U.S. troops, with local Iraqis, and his close calls with death. The book is not political, it's just the real story, but Engel does voice his frustration with the violence and lack of progress. If you want to understand the war, Iran's role, the Shia Sunni conflict, and history building up to all this, this is a must read. Very interesting and hard to put down.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-16 03:03:03 EST)
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| 08-06-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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I agree with all the other reviewers that said this should be required reading for Americans. The truth about war can't be told in 3 minute sound bites between commercial breaks. Through Engel's voice, the American occupation of Iraq is exposed. The book is brutally honest and very real. This isn't a partisan hack job from an outside observer, but rather a personal story about a reporter living in Iraq, embedded with the troops and often putting his life in grave danger to report the news for citizens that would rather ignore it.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-16 03:03:03 EST)
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| 07-25-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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a first-rate, informed, even-handed description of the war in Iraq. Very much worth reading. Bing West
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-07 08:16:49 EST)
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| 07-20-08 | 2 | (NA) |
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I was enjoying this book until chapter 20, when it starts to become more political rant than factual account. Up until chapter 20, it was very engaging, educational and down to earth. But like most journalists, Engel is clearly a democrat and could only refrain from criticism of President Bush for so long. There were times I had to put the book down after chapter 20 because the tone had gotten so hostile and political.
Engel does do an excellent job of detailing aspects about Iraq's internal politics which were very enlightening. But the big hole in his "its Bush's fault" line of reasoning is that had Saddam died of natural causes, we would be exactly where we are today. One could easily argue the United States only hastened the inevitable settling of suppressed Iraqi conflicts - but that obvious point is never explored. Of course, who really knows what was going on in Iraq before the war; no one really cared to cover it. An unfortunate byproduct of Engel's book is I that it made me more discouraged about the Middle East and Islam, and I'm not really sure that was his intent. As you approach the end of the book, it's kind of hard to have anything but loathing for the mindless violence of the area and the suffering it causes worldwide. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-26 00:18:42 EST)
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| 07-14-08 | 5 | 0\1 |
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This was a gift to my husband. His comments are as follows, "The best book I've read in a long time. Well Written !!!"
I have just started this book and don't want to put it down. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-24 00:20:05 EST)
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| 07-14-08 | 5 | 1\2 |
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This is the real deal. This guy has been there from the beginning. He has met with the generals, soldiers, insurgents and our President. Very well written and full of information you should know and understand. This is an election year. Stop listening to the talking heads and their OBama rips and McCain raps. You cannot understand a platform if you don't learn about this war. Yes, there were no WMDs. We are there, however, and these brave soldiers are doing our work. Unfortunately, the people they are trying to help do not value life. They are in never never land, living this life thinking there is something better that they are entitled to. This book makes you think and will make your stomach turn. Ten stars for this book, it is in the top three of anything I have read politically in the last few years. As good as Looming Towers? I think so, just as informative. A note to Richard Engel if he reads this, Thank you for the reporting!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-24 00:20:05 EST)
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| 07-14-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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After reading Richard Engel's "War Journal" I tell everyone I meet that they should put it on their reading list. This is a throughly compelling read telling it like it really is on the ground over there. Engel spares no horror, nor should he. I can not understand why more of his experiences have not found they way onto our tv reports and into our print media. This administration is so determined to make their war seem justified that they are covering up what is the reality. Case in point: not allowing pictures to be taken of our dead military's caskets coming home. If a reporter did take such a picture, his credentials were immediately pulled. If my son were coming home in a casket, I would want the entire world to see it and honor him. There has been none of this, but thanks to books like "War Journal" we are able to get a close up, even handed, report given to us by a top rated journalist who has been in the thick of it for 5 years. I do wish Richard Engel well and hope he does come out of this catastropy unharmed.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-24 00:20:05 EST)
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| 07-05-08 | 5 | 1\2 |
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Anyone supporting the war in Iraq needs to read this book.
No holds bared, account of life in Iraq during the occupation. A must read. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-14 00:19:11 EST)
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| 07-04-08 | 3 | 2\5 |
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An interesting addition to the other books on the war in Iraq but certainly not one that I would put high on my list of books on this subject.
It's an easy read, entertaining but rather shallow and at times not truthful. The most interesting part is when Engel describes the tribulations a reporter needs to endure to try and collect newsworthy information. Pretty difficult job. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-14 00:19:11 EST)
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| 07-04-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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this is an excellent book by a journalist who practices his art with intelligence and guts. no dumbing down for the evening news broadcast here. he actually goes into specific details as to the religious conflicts wracking the country. america and the muslim world both suffer from a serious misunderstanding of the other side's motives and way of things. mr engel opens up quite a bit more in his journal than he ever was able to do on air. if you want to know the real story, get a solid understanding of what we are up against and how ham fisted our dealing with this mission is, this is the book for you. graphic, scary, anxious moments are not spared the reader.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-14 00:19:11 EST)
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| 07-03-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This is a must read for any one interested in foregin politics. Engel has a great page turner. Go out and buy the book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-06 01:00:54 EST)
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| 06-30-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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I have just finished reading this book and - WOW - what an education! Engel explains differences between Sunni and Shiite from how they communicate to how they express their religion. Honestly, this is a difficult book to read. Engel doesn't soften anything. He tells it like he saw it and sometimes it is very graphic. In his telling though, is an easy to follow chronology from 2003 to today that helps the reader understand what happened and how the situation in Iraq got all twisted up. It's a tough book, but it's honest and all the events are linked in a way that makes sense. If you're wondering, how did Iraq turn into the situation we have today? Read this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-04 04:32:12 EST)
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| 06-26-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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I enjoyed this book thoroughly. Very easy to read. Things that stand out are the author's account of the pressure on him to find "good news" in Iraq and his rather lengthy interview with President Bush.
The latter is interesting because it is a little different from what you would expect from someone who fundamentally disagrees with the President. Engel makes it clear that rather than an airhead, President Bush is a man with a strong sense of his place in history. This makes him even more dangerous, if, as I believe and the author believes, he is wrong. The author himself comes across as a rather interesting person. You have to wonder if he had a bit of death wish to stay in Iraq for so long. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 12:06:16 EST)
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| 06-25-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This is an outstanding book. Richard Engel has lived throughout the middle east for years, speaks both Farsi and Arabic, and has reported on the war since its beginning both an an embed and an independent reporter. This is no political screed. Engel tells it as he sees it.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 12:06:16 EST)
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| 06-21-08 | 5 | 2\5 |
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I have just read "War Journal" by Richard Engel. Normally I do not read books full of blood and gore and gratuitous violence, but the author has the credentials to make a person sit up and take notice. He speaks Arabic, has lived in the Near East for years, and was in Iraq before we invaded it. He has a lot more to say than the sound bites in the evening news. The book is both hard to read and hard to put down, and we learn a lot about Iraqi culture and Islamic culture as well. We have to give thanks for every minute Richard Engel survives to report another day. If he keeps doing it, he will die there. He risks his life every minute he is in Iraq.
I am extremely impressed with his summary of the differences between Shia and Sunni. I read "Islam for Dummies" and didn't get as clear a picture. Also, with examples, he is able to give us insight into the paranoia of Islam. Some examples are absolute lunacy Israel has trees that are loyal to Allah, and, when Judgement day comes, Jews will try to hide behind the trees, but the trees will call out to the Moslems that here is a Jew behind it. Jews, knowing this, are trying to cut down all the trees, but there are too many. Other examples sound almost rational: We would not be making the huge mistakes in Iraq if it weren't part of some larger plot so that the Sunnis can rule again because obviously we wouldn't want the Shia to rule. Or the obverse, we came in to put the Shia in power. Clearly to most rational observers that can't be true because that is virtually handing Iraq over to Iran so there must be some sort of conspiracy not yet clear. Engels got to meet with Bush. The account is fascinating because Engels is another person who finds Bush to have a good mind. This is the second book I have read which shows that Bush is motivated by idealism. There are some parallels that show up in the book From the Islamist: Egyptian Politicians are corrupt; Islam is the solution. Israel is on our border; Islam is the solution; Dirty water is making my child sick; Islam is the solution. From George Bush: The Palestinian Authority has collapsed; Democracy is the solution. Iraq is in chaos; Democracy is the solution. This was a painful book to read, but it is not hard reading. You can probably never find a better book to increase your understanding as to what is happening in Iraq. EVERYONE should read it. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-25 13:16:27 EST)
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| 06-08-08 | 5 | 10\10 |
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Richard Engel came to the Mid-East about 12 years ago without a job, little money ($2,000), and no knowledge of Arabic. Now he is head of the MSNBC Bureau in Iraq, fluent in Arabic, and backed by NBC. That, in itself, is an incredible story.
"War Journal," however, spends little time on Engel himself. It begins with telling how it felt to descend into Saddam's spider-hole, and goes on to observe that the rising power of Shiites in Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon is the most significant shift in the region in decades. (Turns out Iran had a strong hand in selecting the Shiite candidates in our greatly heralded first Iraqi elections.) "War Journal" tells the real story from Iraq's front lines, not the official blather dispensed from the "Green Zone." Engel wastes no time telling readers that many Iraqi army officers felt betrayed by Bremer's telling them to "get lost" after giving them token payments and their having obeyed American instructions to not fight. As for Al-Qaeda in Iraq - Engel states that Saddam allowed a few of their jidhadists in when the U.S. invasion seemed inevitable, but undoubtedly would have run them back out if the U.S. had not invaded. We also learn that Bin Laden planned to suck the U.S. into a war of attrition in Afghanistan post 9/11, but did not forsee locals turning on Al Qaeda. "Support Our Troops" became a bad joke when contrasted with the poor or non-existent equipment American troops had in Iraq. Hussein's tyranny became replaced by constant kidnappings and midnight murders of sectarian enemies. Engel also tells the heart-breaking story of a grocer's young daughter kidnapped for ransom - when the father learns she has been raped, he tells the kidnappers he doesn't want her back, and she is killed. Throughout "War Journal," Engel takes us first hand on multiple missions to attack suspected insurgent havens, replenish front-line troops, and in one case, rescue a soldier left behind. Another big insight from "War Journal" is that while "The Surge" appears to be working, it is mostly due to ethnic cleansing having been completed (3 million refugees have left), and Mahdi Army leaders having decided to lie low - not actual military or political success. Meanwhile, faction leaders continue to jockey for position while American troops are killed and wounded. Engel was invited to brief Bush II, whom he found to be attentive and knowledgeable about Iraq. Engel suggested undertaking a major diplomatic initiative - Iran and Syria do not want to face the army that took Saddam's apart (the one that killed half a million Iranians in the 1980s) in 21 days with only 150 deaths; meanwhile, they are attempting to tie us down by sending agents into Iraq. (In fact, Engel is angered by our waging war without a peace process.) Engel also pointed out that Iraqi democracy is a sham - Shiites simply follow the Ayatollah, and the Sunnis don't participate. Finally, Engel observes that Bush doesn't understand how Arabs negotiate, and misreads what they say and do. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-22 00:12:04 EST)
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| 06-08-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Richard Engel came to the Mid-East about 12 years ago without a job, little money, and no knowledge of Arabic. Now he is head of the MSNBC Bureau in Iraq, fluent in Arabic, and backed by NBC. That, in itself, is an incredible story.
"War Journal," however, spends little time on Engel himself. It begins with telling how it felt to descend into Saddam's spider-hole, and goes on to observe that the rising power of Shiites in Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon is the most significant shift in the region in decades. (Turns out Iran had a strong hand in selecting the Shiite candidates in our greatly heralded first Iraqi elections.) "War Journal" tells the real story from Iraq's front lines, not the official blather dispensed from the "Green Zone." Engel wastes no time telling readers that many Iraqi army officers felt betrayed by Bremer's telling them to "get lost" after giving them token payments and their having obeyed American instructions to not fight. As for Al-Qaeda in Iraq - Engel states that Saddam allowed a few of their jidhadists in when the U.S. invasion seemed inevitable, but undoubtedly would have run them back out if the U.S. had not invaded. We also learn that Bin Laden planned to suck the U.S. into a war of attrition in Afghanistan post 9/11, but did not forsee locals turning on Al Qaeda. "Support Our Troops" became a bad joke when contrasted with the poor or non-existent equipment American troops had in Iraq. Hussein's tyranny became replaced by constant kidnappings and midnight murders of sectarian enemies. Engel also tells the heart-breaking story of a grocer's young daughter kidnapped for ransom - when the father learns she has been raped, he tells the kidnappers he doesn't want her back, and she is killed. Throughout "War Journal," Engel takes us first hand on multiple missions to attack suspected insurgent havens, replenish front-line troops, and rescue troops left behind. Another big insight from "War Journal" is that "The Surge" appears to be working - more from the ethnic cleansing having been completed, and less from actual military or political success. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-11 07:25:44 EST)
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| 06-06-08 | 5 | 4\4 |
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Heard a book interview with author, today on NPR. Mr. Engel's concise and keen knowledge and appreciation of the culture, coupled with his language skills left me with a realistic impression of what lies ahead regarding the alliances and treaties being formed in the lull of a war-torn society. What struck me most was the caller who asked if we are getting the whole story from the media and leaders of our country. Without hesitation, Mr. Engel said, 'what we assess as illogical and as irrational reasons for war is not without its own logic.' Based on the observations that history and events have led to what he identified as five (5) separate wars, I believe he has made his case. This informative book, without embellishment provides compelling talking points necessary to our national dialogue on the subject. This timely assessment should be on every citizen's must read list.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-09 07:15:42 EST)
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| 06-06-08 | 4 | 4\4 |
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"War Journal" is a personal and engaging account of Engel's experiences in the five years since the invasion of Iraq. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the book and read it almost straight through in about a day and a half. Engel covers a wide ranges of topics including military tactics, media coverage of the war, Iraqi and US politics, personal accounts from those he speaks with, and even recounts a rather revealing talk he had with Bush (particularly interesting in comparison to Engel's most recent interview with the president). He also revisits most of the moments and events featured in his MSNBC special "War Zone Diary", including the bombings of his hotels and the false kidnapping of one of his reporters. Here he gives them more context and illuminates them with more of his own personal reflections.
The text is quick-paced with the straightforwardness of a journalist. It reads easily and informatively. That said, the descriptive prose sometimes lacks the eloquence of a novelist as the similes often border on the trite and tired. Nonetheless, they effectively convey the atmosphere or mood Engel means to evoke. The quickness of the text seems to mirror the experience of covering the war as Engel is unable to spend much time contemplating the atrocities he sees and the losses he experiences as there always seems to be another story to file. Engel's personal anecdotes pepper the recounting of events and intersperse the background information Engel eruditely includes to help the reader understand the various "why's?" many of us have regarding the war. His anecdotes range from the harrowing and infuriating to the comedic and touching. All of which helps to humanize and give perspective to the typical news reports everyone has seen on the war, which usually get cut down bare facts and numbers. I highly recommend "War Journal" to anyone interested in an "on the ground perspective," as Engel calls it, and to anyone interested in a reporter's point of view without the limitations of an evening news story. Engel's story is informative and revealing but at many points poignant, making one stop reading at times so as to remember that this is nonfiction and not horror or science fiction one is reading. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-09 07:15:42 EST)
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| 06-03-08 | 4 | 7\7 |
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I must say that books on the war is not usually the kind of book that I read, however I picked this up because I've seen Richard reporting from Iraq and other nearby places on a regular basis on the Today show.
As a reporter on the frontlines, there is little he hasn't seen. He's had close calls, dodged bullets many times, escaped kidnapping attempts and has seen too many dead bodies to count. He is passionate about the region and wouldn't live anywhere else. He starts the book on the day where he was taken to the spot where Saddam was captured. He writes about everything thereafter in great detail. He also lets you know his position on the war - rather than trying to remain neutral like journalists should, but he wanted to tell it like it is for him. He ends the book by saying that the world has moved on and people don't want to hear about Iraq anymore and how he finds that frustrating and sometimes wonders "why I have done all this?". He knows people are losing interest in the war. It is a heavy going book and yet, if you push through it, it is interesting and it's great to get a feel for what it might be like over there first hand from a very knowledgable and trusted journalist. I liked this one. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-06 02:39:59 EST)
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