Anthony Shadid
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    • Night Draws Near
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House of Stone Reviews

Responses to House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family and a Lost Middle East. You can find Anthony’s books online here: Amazon • Barnes & Noble • IndieBound •Powell’s

“I was captivated, instantly, by Anthony Shadid’s lushly evocative prose. Crumbling Ottoman outposts, doomed pashas, and roving bandits feel immediate, familiar, and relevant. Lose yourself in these pages, where empires linger, grandparents wander, and a battered Lebanon beckons us home. Savor it all. If Márquez had explored nonfiction, Macondo would feel as real as Marjayoun.” – Dave Cullen, author of Columbine


“Six pages into this book, I said to myself, if Anthony Shadid continues like this, this book will be a classic. And page by page, he did continue, and he wrote a honest-to-God, hands-down, undeniable and instant classic. This is a book about war, and terrible loss, and a troubled region, and his own tattered family history, yes, but it’s written with the kind of levity and candor and lyricism we associate with, say, Junot Diaz — and that makes the book, improbably, both a compulsive read and one you don’t want to end. I have no idea how Shadid pulled all this off while talking about the history of modern Lebanon, how he balanced ribald humor and great warmth  with the sorrow woven into a story like this, but anyway, we should all be grateful that he did.” — Dave Eggers, author of Zeitoun and What Is the What


“No one has chronicled the Middle East’s recent wars as brilliantly as Anthony Shadid, but in this moving exploration of home he takes us deeper behind the headlines and into his own family’s ancestral village. His wise, compassionate storytelling weaves together unforgettable characters, hilarious dialogue, cultural insights, and elegiac journeys into the past. This masterful narrative offers an intimate, lyrical portrait of a country we usually see only through the chaos of war. In rebuilding his family home in southern Lebanon, Shadid commits an extraordinarily generous act of restoration for his wounded land, and for us all.” – Annia Ciezadlo, author of Day of Honey: A Memoir of Food, Love, and War


“From the premier American journalist in the Middle East, House of Stone is unlike any other book you’ll read about the region. Deeply personal, funny and soulful, filled with wisdom and wonder, it is a profound meditation on history, friendship, politics, and the indelible music that guides us home.” — Phil Bennett, former managing editor, Washington Post


“Anthony Shadid brings humanity to a region that is too often reduced to victims and terrorists. His clarity and humanity have long shined through in his reporting from the Arab world. Now he turns his keen and compassionate gaze inward, as he works to. . . reconstruct his past in the land of his Lebanese ancestors. In this moving chronicle of a house coming back to life, Shadid offers meditations on war, politics, friendship, and village life. Alongside this stands the quintessentially American journey of his immigrant grandparents. Much humor, beauty, and wisdom can be found in these pages.” — Sandy Tolan, author of The Lemon Tree: An Arab, A Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East


“No one has chronicled the Middle East’s recent wars as brilliantly as Anthony Shadid, but in this moving exploration of home he takes us deeper behind the headlines and into his own family’s ancestral village. His wise, compassionate storytelling weaves together unforgettable characters, hilarious dialogue, cultural insights, and elegiac journeys into the past. This masterful narrative offers an intimate, lyrical portrait of a country we usually see only through the chaos of war. In rebuilding his family home in southern Lebanon, Shadid commits an extraordinarily generous act of restoration for his wounded land, and for us all.” – Annia Ciezadlo, author of Day of Honey: A Memoir of Food, Love, and War


“Evocative and beautifully written, Anthony Shadid uses the restoration of his lovely ancestral stone home in South Lebanon as a metaphor for history, family and the importance of place. It is a wistful story, at once sad and amusing, that opens an arched window onto the complexities of the Middle Eastern mosaic. Shadid is one of America’s most courageous and perceptive foreign correspondents and he should be read by anyone who wishes to understand the agonies and hopes of the Middle East.” – Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and author most recently of Crossing Mandelbaum Gate


“Human greatness and human pettiness, the shadow of past glories and the intricacies of everyday life, the blending of cultures and the need to belong, the courage in facing hardship and the readiness to abandon basic values in order to survive — few books provide such a subtle, yet powerful insight into the tragedy of today’s Middle East.” – Amin Maalouf, author of Origins: A Memoir


“Anthony Shadid’s House of Stone is a haunting, beautifully realized piece of writing. With the poignancy of an exile and the eye of a reporter, Shadid juxtaposes past and present to tell the story not only of his family’s house and what happened there, but also to take us back to a Middle East we had forgotten, a place of grace, dignity and diversity that illuminates what has been and what is in the Middle East.” – Nick Flynn, author of Another Bullshit Night in Suck City and The Ticking is the Bomb


“Anthony Shadid’s beautifully rendered memoir is a rich account of a man’s gradual immersion into the world of Middle East and the culture of the Levant, a kingdom almost unrecognizable today, where the rooms and hallways of his great-grandfather’s house tell stories that will linger with every reader for decades. Readers of Shadid’s work in the New York Times will be impressed by his expanding range as a writer and by the way the life of each of his characters echo the region’s haunting misfortunes.” —André Aciman, author of Out of Egypt


“House of Stone takes the reader to the heart of the Middle East and all its conflicts: the core question of what gives people a sense of who they are and what they are. In this deeply personal but deeply relevant memoir, he looks at the way family, place, history and faith work their way into a people’s blood, determining not only how they look at their past, but how they go about trying to build a future.” – Christopher Dickey, Middle East Bureau Chief, Newsweek


“Readers like me who have admired Anthony Shadid’s superb close-to-the-ground reporting from the Middle East will be fascinated by this very different sort of journey he takes into his own family’s past. He not only reconstructs that story in words, he physically rebuilds the house at its center. I know few family memoirs more bold and unusual.” – Adam Hochschild, author of To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion


“Homesickness forms part of the American condition, the descendants of immigrants longing for places most of them have never seen. In this deeply affecting memoir, at turns both melancholy and comic, Anthony Shadid demonstrates that you can indeed go home again — and reveals the rich rewards waiting there.” — Andrew J. Bacevich, author of Washington Rules: America’s Path to Permanent War


“To some reporters, the Middle East is a ‘story.’ To Anthony Shadid, one of the best journalists working today, it is life itself. His love of the place and its people resonates in every word of this lovely book.” — Thomas E. Ricks, author of Fiasco and The Gamble


“Anthony Shadid has written a beautiful and timeless book about a broken place and a breaking man. House of Stone is poignant, aching, and at times laugh-out-loud funny. It is a story of history and healing, and Shadid’s writing is so lyrical it’s like hearing a song.” — David Finkel, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Good Soldiers


“In House of Stone, Anthony Shadid embarks on a remarkable journey through time, an unforgettable and moving chronicle of discovery and determination. Shadid brings alive a landscape of lost hope and rekindled yearning with the flair and timeless eloquence of Naguib Mahfouz. The house in Marjayoun is more than just the cool breezes and stone arches, it is a gateway to another time.” — David Hoffman, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Dead Hand: The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and its Dangerous Legacy


“Anthony Shadid has always been an exquisite story-teller. He has done it again in House of Stone, taking a riveting, soulful, and candid journey into his own history by rebuilding his long-abandoned family home in Lebanon. The sub-story explores how the area’s plight is a microcosm of the state’s challenges, current and past. Shadid’s many fans — old and new — will be regaled along the way as the impossible becomes quirkily possible. In the end, it’s a story of hope — that for some, you can go home again.” — Robin Wright, author of Rock the Casbah


“A compelling study of exile and return, conflict and reconciliation, identity and memory. Shadid brings the reader along on his own journey to make peace with his past. The writing is both gripping and lyrical, and he expertly weaves together the personal and the universal. The reader comes away not only knowing vastly more about Lebanon and its history, but more about the human condition as well.” — Jon B. Alterman, Middle East Program director, Center for Strategic and International Studies


“What a beautiful introduction to a world that I knew so little about. House of Stone is engaging, poignant, and funny. A lovely and unique story that will stay with me.” —Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone

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  • The Books

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    House of Stone

    An unforgettable memoir of the world’s most volatile landscape and the universal yearning for home.
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    Night Draws Near

    A riveting account of ordinary people caught between the struggles of nations.
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    Legacy of the Prophet

    A first-person account of the transformation in the style and message of Islamic politics at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
  • Buy

    Amazon • Barnes & Noble • IndieBound • Powell's
  • A note from Nada Bakri

    "I do not approve of and will not be a part of any public discussion of Anthony's passing. It does nothing but sadden Anthony's children to have to endure repeated public discussion of the circumstances of their father's death."
    –Nada Bakri, wife of the late Anthony Shadid
  • Twtitter Tributes

    anna_lamadda: #lacasadipietra di #anthonyshadid è un libro DA LEGGERE. Un ottimo consiglio di @robertosaviano
    93 months ago
    beatnikjourno: Yes. RT @jessradio Remembering #MarieColvin and #AnthonyShadid today on #InternationalPressFreedomDay. Two great journalists we lost.
    94 months ago
    2imen: RT @abumuqawama: RT @Waleed_Hazbun: In memory, #AnthonyShadid last lecture at #AUB http://t.co/qkqKp0UG
    94 months ago
    v____: RT @abumuqawama: RT @Waleed_Hazbun: In memory, #AnthonyShadid last lecture at #AUB http://t.co/qkqKp0UG
    94 months ago
    ShadiElkarra: RT @camanpour: Deeply honored to receive the #AnthonyShadid award for journalism at Tuesday April 16 @AAIUSA Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Awards in DC.
    94 months ago
    ojsutton: RT @camanpour: Deeply honored to receive the #AnthonyShadid award for journalism at Tuesday April 16 @AAIUSA Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Awards in DC.
    94 months ago
  • Reviews

    • “…wise, compassionate storytelling” : Review from Annia Ciezadlo
    • House of Stone Review from Dave Eggers
    • “I was captivated, instantly”: Dave Cullen
    • Reviews for House of Stone
  • News

    • Interrogating the NY Times’ Anthony Shadid
    • Anthony Shadid’s Interview on NPR’s Fresh Air
    • Anthony Shadid on Qatar
    • Across Divide in Iraq, a Sunni Courts Shiites
    • In Assad’s Syria, There Is No Imagination
  • Pulitzer Entries

    • In Thuluyah, reverberations of a U.S. raid
    • ‘People woke up, and they were gone’
    • In Anbar, U.S.-Allied Tribal Chiefs Feel Deep Sense of Abandonment
    • Worries About Kurdish-Arab Conflict Move to Fore in Iraq
    • In the City of Cement
    • A Quite but Undeniable Cultural Legacy
    • A Journey Into the Iraq of Recollection
    • No One Values the Victims Anymore
    • New Paths to Power Emerge in Iraq
    • In Iraq, the Day After