In the past decade Pakistan has become a country of immense importance to its region, the United States, and the world. With almost 200 million people, a 500,000-man army, nuclear weapons, and a large diaspora in Britain and North America, Pakistan is central to the hopes of jihadis and the fears of their enemies. Yet the greatest short-term threat to Pakistan is not Islamist insurgency as such, but the actions of the United States, and the greatest long-term threat is ecological change. Anatol Lievens book is a magisterial investigation of this highly complex and often poorly understood country: its regions, ethnicities, competing religious traditions, varied social landscapes, deep political tensions, and historical patterns of violence; but also its surprising underlying stability, rooted in kinship, patronage, and the power of entrenched local elites. Engagingly written, combining history and profound analysis with reportage from Lievens extensive travels as a journalist and academic, Pakistan: A Hard Country is both utterly compelling and deeply revealing.
In the past decade Pakistan has become a country of immense importance to its region, the United States, and the world. With almost 200 million people, a 500,000-man army, nuclear weapons, and a large diaspora in Britain and North America, Pakistan is central to the hopes of jihadis and the fears of their enemies. Yet the greatest short-term threat to Pakistan is not Islamist insurgency as such, but the actions of the United States, and the greatest long-term threat is ecological change. Anatol Lievens book is a magisterial investigation of this highly complex and often poorly understood country: its regions, ethnicities, competing religious traditions, varied social landscapes, deep political tensions, and historical patterns of violence; but also its surprising underlying stability, rooted in kinship, patronage, and the power of entrenched local elites. Engagingly written, combining history and profound analysis with reportage from Lievens extensive travels as a journalist and academic, Pakistan: A Hard Country is both utterly compelling and deeply revealing.
Economist, April 7, 2011
"Yet for drama, colour and complexity, [Pakistan] is hard to beat;
and Anatol Lieven captures the richness of the place wonderfully.
His book has the virtues of both journalism and scholarship..."
Foreign Policy's The AfPak Channel blog, April 11, 2011
"The release of Anatol Lieven's latest book, Pakistan: A Hard
Country, could not be timelier. This insightful, comprehensive
portrait of Pakistan is the perfect antidote to stereotypical
descriptions of the country as the most dangerous place in the
world... Pakistan: A Hard Country has the power to dampen the
paranoia about Pakistan's security complex, put terrorism in
perspective, and humanize Pakistanis." Foreign Affairs, May/June
2011"Challenging the notion that Pakistan is fragile, Lieven
presents in exquisite detail how things actually work, for better
or for worse, in that 'hard country.'"
Evening Standard, April 21, 2011
"The gulf between...the multiple realities most Pakistanis know -
and how outsiders perceive their country is wide and deep. Lieven's
book is an ambitious and much-needed attempt to bridge it. The most
striking thing about the book is its informed and consistently
sensible tone. This tone is not heard much in discussions about
Pakistan, and it is refreshing. Lieven writes in an affable,
conversational voice, but not a casual one. His observations are
precise and judicious." Financial Times, April 22, 2011"Pakistan,
as Anatol Lieven explains in this thorough analysis of the internal
sources of this resilience, will not disintegrate easily...He
deftly tackles the misperception in the west that Islamist groups
might easily sweep through Pakistan." The Nation, April 13,
2011"This book could hardly be timelier. Lucid and well informed,
he deals carefully with Pakistan's well-known problems. He raises
hope, avoiding the hysteria and partial judgment that disfigure
much contemporary writing on the subject. Above all, he emanates a
deep affection bordering on love for the unfortunate, beleaguered,
magical Pakistan."
IBN Live, May 19, 2011
"If I had to review the book 'Pakistan: A Hard Country' in one line
I would say it is brilliant. The book is well researched,
informative, insightful, but most of all for a country that finds
itself often in headline news for the wrong reasons, empathetic."
The Age, May 20, 2011"In his fine new book Pakistan. A Hard
Country, Lieven argues that while the state is weak, Pakistani
society is immensely strong." New Statesman, May 12, 2011"does much
to counter lazy assumptions about the country that proliferate
elsewhere" The Spectator, May 13, 2011"His analysis of networks and
systems is precise; his accounts of his travels illuminating as
well as entertaining." The Guardian, May 1, 2011"Lieven's Pakistan:
A Hard Country is one such blow for clarity and sobriety... Lieven
overturns many prejudices, and gives general readers plenty of
fresh concepts with which to think about a routinely misrepresented
country."
New York Times Book Review, June 26, 2011
"Ambitious...a sweeping and insightful narrative."Washington Times,
July 7, 2011
"Thanks to Mr. Lieven's sound scholarship and perceptive insights
in 'Pakistan: A Hard Country, ' readers will come away with a
clearer understanding of why it is such a complex, conflicted
country and why it will continue to be of vital interest to the
United States long after the last American soldier has come home
from Afghanistan."Policy Review, August/September 2011
"His experience as a reporter gives Lieven both the tone of an
insider and a vast affection for the country, which he credits for
giving him "some of the best moments" of his life. In an attempt to
explain the world's sixth-most populous nation in under 600 pages,
Lieven ranges widely, touching upon everything from the rise and
fall of landed families in the Punjab to the sloth of the national
police to the garish decor in wealthy homes. To this ambitious task
the author brings both thoroughness and an impressive familiarity
with his subject." DAWN.com, August 2, 2011"a thought-provoking and
widely influential new book" DAWN.com September 2, 2011
The Independent, May 5, 2011
"Lieven's feat lies in his remarkable, flesh-and-blood portrait of
the nation, ranging across demographic swathes and including a
chorus of voices from farmers to intelligence officers. The picture
is one of a semi-anarchic nation mired in police savagery,
institutional corruption, population bulges, water shortages and
the risk of catastrophic environmental disaster following last
year's floods." The New York Times Book Review, June 26,
2011"Ambitious...a sweeping and insightful narrative." Newsline
Magazine, June, 2011"Pakistan: A Hard Country manages to be
clear-headed and realistic, a welcome respite from the
scare-mongering that taints so many western accounts of Pakistan."
The Organiser (India), June 26, 2011"This book is about the best
that has been published in recent times about Pakistan." MoneyLife
(India), June 18, 2011
"Pakistan-A Hard Country is one of the most detailed accounts of a
country which often seems like it is held together by chewing gum
(or willpower, if you like)--but what still makes it tick? Anatol
Lieven knows, and it shows in this work."
The New Republic, May 5, 2011
"his book may be described as the most informed Gazetteer on
contemporary Pakistan. Instead of the too often repeated narrative
of Pakistan's history and ills, he offers a broader sweep into the
condition of the provinces, the climate, the political parties and
their personalities--and, in his best chapter, an important
discussion of how today's Taliban represent a continuation of
similar uprisings a century ago. Dallas Morning News, May 9,
2011
"Since the death of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan last week, it's
become increasingly clear that anyone hoping to follow
international affairs should perhaps have begun watching that
country some time ago. Fortunately, Pakistan: A Hard Country serves
as an outstanding primer -- even reading just the introduction is
supremely useful... Lieven crafts a lucid and thoroughly
fascinating whole from a wealth of information... Lieven's writing
is excellent, especially crucial in a book tackling a topic with
which many readers are entirely unfamiliar. Moreover, he clearly
loves the place and its people. Pakistan A Hard Country is the work
of one of those rare writers able to see his subject in all its
complexity, without either turning away or becoming a partisan of
one perspective or the other."
Wall Street Journal, June 27, 2011"[Lieven] brings an infectious
enthusiasm to his task of summarizing the workings of the world's
sixth most populous country. In this quest, he ranges effortlessly
from a police station in Peshawar to a politician's mansion in the
Punjab to the mean streets of Karachi. He dishes up pithy
observations while delving deep into the nation's history,
politics, culture and institutions... Mr. Lieven's eye for detail,
command of subcontinental history and old-fashioned shoe-leather
reporting make this in many ways an excellent primer on Pakistan."
The Nation, July 18, 2011 "Lieven has written a sensible and
thorough exploration of Pakistan's political sphere... Pakistan is
a large subject, and an unforgivingly complicated one at that, yet
Lieven manages to tackle some of its most obscure problems without
losing his cool... Lieven has written a very measured book, no easy
task when writing about such a hard country." TotalPolitics.com,
summer reading guide, June 28, 2011"counter-intuitive... [Lieven]
argues that the question should be not why Islamist political
movements are so strong in Pakistan today, but why they are so
weak. Provocative." Irish Times, June 4, 2011
Kirkus, February 15, 2011
"Lieven breaks down his study by specific region; considers the
structures of justice, religion, the military and politics in turn;
and, finally, in a skillful, insightful synthesis, addresses the
history of and issues concerning the Taliban, both Pakistani and
Afghani. A well-reasoned, welcome resource for Western "experts"
and lay readers alike."Edward Luce
"Everybody nowadays seems to take a view on Pakistan. Very few know
what they're talking about. Anatol Lieven is that rare observer - a
scholar who writes like the best kind of foreign correspondent
about a country that he takes and measures on its own terms.
Pakistan, a Hard Country offers an intimate and compellingly
relevant portrait of an increasingly pivotal nation to the future
of the world, for better or for worse. It fills a large gap in our
understanding."
Huffington Post, April 3, 2011"Over the last decade, Lieven has
been one of the smartest and most fair-minded commentators on the
global situation, and in this important, very timely book, he
explains the regions, classes, history, and prospects of Pakistan
with equal value for both the neophyte and the expert. Based on
Lieven's first-hand knowledge of the country for the past 20
years."
"An insightful book that is part anthropological study, part
reportage. Threaded throughout are the voices of ordinary
Pakistanis farmers, politicians, spooks, landowners, businessmen,
soldiers, judges, clerics and jihadis whose contributions in the
form of direct quotes enliven and illuminate this complex yet
affectionate portrait of their country. Published just before bin
Laden s death, the book does not read as if it has been overtaken
by events. Indeed, its textured, penetrating survey of the dynamics
shaping contemporary Pakistan could hardly be more timely, given
the relative dearth of literature on the subject. Lieven makes a
compelling case for why we should pay more attention to what is one
of the most important but least understood countries in the world."
Small Wars Journal, June 5, 2011"Anatol Lieven has written an
excellent book...It is perhaps the one book to read on Pakistan in
2011, and offers a level of nuance required for those wanting to
become true specialists on the complexity of Pakistan's political
history."
"Kirkus," February 15, 2011
"Lieven breaks down his study by specific region; considers the
structures of justice, religion, the military and politics in turn;
and, finally, in a skillful, insightful synthesis, addresses the
history of and issues concerning the Taliban, both Pakistani and
Afghani. A well-reasoned, welcome resource for Western "experts"
and lay readers alike.""Edward Luce
""Everybody nowadays seems to take a view on Pakistan. Very few
know what they're talking about. Anatol Lieven is that rare
observer - a scholar who writes like the best kind of foreign
correspondent about a country that he takes and measures on its own
terms. "Pakistan, a Hard Country" offers an intimate and
compellingly relevant portrait of an increasingly pivotal nation to
the future of the world, for better or for worse. It fills a large
gap in our understanding."
"Huffington Post," April 3, 2011"Over the last decade, Lieven has
been one of the smartest and most fair-minded commentators on the
global situation, and in this important, very timely book, he
explains the regions, classes, history, and prospects of Pakistan
with equal value for both the neophyte and the expert. Based on
Lieven's first-hand knowledge of the country for the past 20
years.""
Economist," April 7, 2011
"Yet for drama, colour and complexity, [Pakistan] is hard to beat;
and Anatol Lieven captures the richness of the place wonderfully.
His book has the virtues of both journalism and scholarship..."
"Foreign Policy's The AfPak Channel blog," April 11, 2011
"The release of Anatol Lieven's latest book, Pakistan: A Hard
Country, could not be timelier. This insightful, comprehensive
portrait of Pakistan is the perfect antidote to stereotypical
descriptions of the country as the most dangerous place in the
world... Pakistan: A Hard Country has the power to dampen the
paranoia about Pakistan's security complex, put terrorism in
perspective, and humanize Pakistanis." "Foreign Affairs," Ma
"Kirkus", February 15, 2011
"Lieven breaks down his study by specific region; considers the
structures of justice, religion, the military and politics in turn;
and, finally, in a skillful, insightful synthesis, addresses the
history of and issues concerning the Taliban, both Pakistani and
Afghani. A well-reasoned, welcome resource for Western "experts"
and lay readers alike.""Edward Luce" "Everybody nowadays seems to
take a view on Pakistan. Very few know what they're talking about.
Anatol Lieven is that rare observer - a scholar who writes like the
best kind of foreign correspondent about a country that he takes
and measures on its own terms. "Pakistan, a Hard Country" offers an
intimate and compellingly relevant portrait of an increasingly
pivotal nation to the future of the world, for better or for worse.
It fills a large gap in our understanding."
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