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Author Gold, Alan, author.

Title Bell of the desert / Alan Gold.

Publication Info. New York : Yucca Publishing, [2014]

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Windsor, Main Library - Adult Department  F-GOLD    Check Shelf
Description 451 pages ; 24 cm
Summary She was the most celebrated adventurer of her day, the brains behind Lawrence of Arabia, an adviser to kings and desert sheikhs, and the British government's secret weapon in WWI in the campaign against the Turks. A brilliant academic, mountaineer, explorer, linguist, politician, and towering literary figure, Gertrude Bell is the most significant unsung heroine of the twentieth century. Alan Gold's meticulously researched novel accurately opens history's pages on a peerless woman who broke all molds on how Victorian women were supposed to behave--socially, intellectually, and physically. Guiding the events of the day in open, sanctioned diplomacy and adventure all across the Middle East, her influence on the men at the vanguard of history, and her unparalleled skill in sculpting the pathways and influences of the English, French, and Arab allies on the region, all lead to perhaps her greatest achievement: single-handedly creating today's Iraq. Told as a biographical narrative of history, Alan Gold reveals that, more than any other single figure, it was this extraordinary woman who most determinedly fashioned the Arab world as we know it today.
Subject Bell, Gertrude Lowthian, 1868-1926 -- Fiction.
Arabists -- Great Britain -- Fiction.
Women archaeologists -- Great Britain -- Fiction.
Archaeologists -- Great Britain -- Fiction.
Colonial administrators -- Middle East -- Fiction.
Tribes -- Fiction.
Iraq -- History -- 1534-1921 -- Fiction.
ISBN 9781631580079 (hardback)
1631580078 (hardback)
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