Selected Product: | Seven Pillars of Wisdom (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) Paperback Edition: New Ed Author: T.E. Lawrence Publisher: Wordsworth Editions Ltd Release Date: June 1997 ISBN-10: 1853264695 ISBN-13: 9781853264696 List Price: £3.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Seven Pillars of Wisdom (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) by T.E. Lawrence (ISBN-10: 1853264695, ISBN-13: 9781853264696). At this time we have not yet written a review for Seven Pillars of Wisdom (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) by T.E. Lawrence (ISBN-10: 1853264695, ISBN-13: 9781853264696). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Best Ever | Customer Rating: | Brilliant. T E Lawrence poured his soul into this magnificently crafted autobiography. It takes you from his arrival in Cairo as an upstart academic, through his dramatic evolution into a desert soldier/strategist and leader of the Arab revolt against the Turks, to his ultimate failure to win justice for the people he'd grown to be part of. Lawrence was a gifted writer as well as an extraordinary soldier and I was fascinated by the insights that run through it: into his political naivety, his ambivalent loyalties, and the hints of concern (almost certainly ill-founded) about his own mental state. The combination of high politics and personal danger, played out in the dramatic and mysterious Arab world as it meets the West is quite magnificent.
The writing style is nineteenth century and the language and prose may be unfamiliar to many but this is the most rewarding book I have read. It's the one I unhesitatingly offer as the best ever.
| A book for bedtime..... | Customer Rating: | Are you a philosopher? - Read no further, you might enjoy this book, if you can stay awake long enough - for the rest of us, this book, unlike its author, is just not interesting - it's too long-winded. Definitely NOT a book to read in the 21st Century, it's just NOT of our time - the title is the most interesting thing about it. It's about as interesting as that dull little tome by Ann Robinson.....zzzzzzzzzzz ......time for bed... | Lawrence of Arabia from his own point of view | Customer Rating: | | Having been a geat fan of the David Lean film ever since my father took me as a 7 year old boy to see it when it was first released, I had intended to read Lawrence's own account of the events covered by the film for a long time. The book itself is a mixture of autobiographical recounting of the events covered by the film and a travelogue interspersed with almost essay type observations by Lawrence on a wide variety of subjects including the plight of the Arabs, their culture, his own motivation and the wartime life of soldiers in general. Most of the book is descriptive with very little in the way of dialogue and it can at times become very difficult to persevere with, particularly during the author's sometimes extreme moments of navel-gazing. However, the persistent reader is taken on a unique journey with Lawrence through his adventures, middle eastern culture and the spectacular desert scenery of the area. When the time came to part I was rather sorry that the journey was over as Lawrence is, if nothing else, an extremely knowledgeable guide. Taken as an adjunct to the film (which takes a certain amount of artistic licence with the facts) the book deepens one's understanding of its political, geographical and personal context and provides a unique insight into the strengths and weaknesses of the man himself. |
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