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aahlvers's review against another edition
5.0
I am reading currently reading Gertrude Bell: Queen Of The Desert, Shaper Of Nations by Georgina Howell. I want to be Gertrude when I grow up, except I don't really want to move to another country and lead an Islamic nation to become an independent and democratic nation. Known as the female "Lawrence of Arabia", Gertrude Bell was instrumental in the creation of Iraq. One of the most dynamic, accomplished women of her times (first woman to ever earn a first at Oxford) she was a true renaissance woman. She was in turn, a spy, archaeologist, poet, photographer, mountain climber and advisor to kings. It was due to her influence that Iraq enjoyed many years as a democratic state, an amazing accomplishment during a time when women were looked at as an decorative accessory instead of capable and intelligent people.
Outstanding and compelling biography. I highly recommended picking up a copy if you get a chance.
Outstanding and compelling biography. I highly recommended picking up a copy if you get a chance.
luke1972's review against another edition
2.0
Wasn't enjoying this book so abandoned it, which is very rare for me. Howell's style of writing just wasn't to my taste (it's not you it's me!). Plenty of others will love this book though.
alexandrapierce's review against another edition
5.0
Every now and then I come across a new historical figure and I think
HOW IS IT POSSIBLE THAT I HAVE NEVER HEARD OF THIS PERSON WHAT HAS THE WORLD BEEN DOING THIS JUST SHOWS HOW MUCH STUFF GETS LOST
Usually that person is a woman, although not always. Gertrude Bell is the most recent of these people. I don't even remember how I heard about her - it might have been in passing in a podcast or something? - at any rate the moment I heard about her I went online to see if there was a biography about her. There are two, I think, modern biogs; this seemed to be the better rated, and so I immediately bought it. Since then my mother has read it, since I always have too many books to be read, and she loved it; then we spent some time together which just happened to coincide with Nicole Kidman's movie about Bell being at the cinema, so we went to see it and I was pushed to move my reading of this bio to the front of the reading queue.
Gertrude Bell might be described as the 'female Lawrence of Arabia', but really it would be more accurate to say that he was the male Gertrude Bell, since I think she had more adventures and was more involved in the immediate post-WW1 decisions regarding Mesopotamia. Bell was born into an immensely wealthy family (which seems to have been devastated, along with everyone else, in the late 20s), and appears to have had a fairly happy childhood despite the loss of her mother early on - she got a stepmother eventually who was very loving. Given she was born in 1868, Bell had an extraordinary education - she had one outside of the home - including graduating with first class Honours in History from Oxford, the first woman to do so. She was bored at home and so she took to travelling, usually to places where the family had connections, at first in Europe. She took up mountaineering and was the first to attempt, and the first to complete, several climbs in the Alps. Not the first woman, the first (with her guides).
Eventually, Bell ended up in the Middle East - Mesopotamia as the British called it - and she undertook several voyages across the desert, visiting tribes and investigating archaeological sites and going places where few, if any, European travellers had ever been - and certainly no European women. She learnt Arabic and befriended sheikhs and learned about tribal relationships and mapped areas extensively. All of this came in handy in WW1 when the British wanted to use this area to get at the Turks, who of course were on the side of Germany; Bell got an official position as an adviser. And then after WW1, amid the machinations of what to do with this area with the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire, Bell was there, trying to guide the British to guide the Arabic people to self-determination and independence.
It's clear that Bell was not always a nice person to be around. She was very dismissive of women who did not meet her standards - boring little wives - which of course was incredibly unfair given the systemic prejudices women were dealing with, and it seems that Bell sometimes ignored her remarkable privilege in that area. She was also, it seems, quite ignorant of her economic privilege; only someone who doesn't have to worry about money doesn't worry about money. Nonetheless the turnout for her funeral, in Baghdad, testifies to the immense respect she commanded from the British and Arabic populations with whom she had worked for so long. The principal wing of the Iraq Museum was designated the Gertrude Bell Room, because of her tireless work in setting it up and ensuring that archaeological remains would actually remain in Iraq; I can't help but wonder whether this still exists.
I am so glad I got to know about Gertrude Bell.
Regarding the biography itself: I was a bit annoyed, early on, by the way Howell structured her book. Bell never married but came close, early on, getting engaged to a man that her family - when they learned of this - deemed unsuitable because of his debts and financial position; he died soon after in what may, or may not, have been suspicious circumstances (pneumonia after swimming in a river). She also had a non-physical affair with a married man later in life, Dick Doughty-Wylie, whose death at Gallipoli devastated her. My problem was that Howell gave the latter relationship, in particular, its own set of chapters that were quite outside of the chronology: outlining all of the torturous ins and outs, and then going back to fill in where she was - like travelling across the desert or working for the Red Cross in France during WW1 - while she was being in love. This, for me, prioritises the romantic angle above the other things in her life, and that doesn't make sense. Even if Howell is right in suggesting that some things Bell did in order to prove herself to, or provoke, Doughty-Wylie, to separate events out artificially doesn't do justice to Bell's amazing life. And I do think that Howell emphasises Bell's connection to Doughty-Wylie a bit much - to the point that the last paragraph of the entire bio reflects on one evening they had together in Bell's childhood home, rather than on the fact that Bell was the Honorary Director of Antiquities for Iraq, say, whose death prompted a letter to her parents from the King and Queen of England and a statement from the Colonial Secretary in the House of Commons.
It is, overall, a well-written biography, and one I immensely enjoyed. Everyone should know about about Gertrude Bell.
HOW IS IT POSSIBLE THAT I HAVE NEVER HEARD OF THIS PERSON WHAT HAS THE WORLD BEEN DOING THIS JUST SHOWS HOW MUCH STUFF GETS LOST
Usually that person is a woman, although not always. Gertrude Bell is the most recent of these people. I don't even remember how I heard about her - it might have been in passing in a podcast or something? - at any rate the moment I heard about her I went online to see if there was a biography about her. There are two, I think, modern biogs; this seemed to be the better rated, and so I immediately bought it. Since then my mother has read it, since I always have too many books to be read, and she loved it; then we spent some time together which just happened to coincide with Nicole Kidman's movie about Bell being at the cinema, so we went to see it and I was pushed to move my reading of this bio to the front of the reading queue.
Gertrude Bell might be described as the 'female Lawrence of Arabia', but really it would be more accurate to say that he was the male Gertrude Bell, since I think she had more adventures and was more involved in the immediate post-WW1 decisions regarding Mesopotamia. Bell was born into an immensely wealthy family (which seems to have been devastated, along with everyone else, in the late 20s), and appears to have had a fairly happy childhood despite the loss of her mother early on - she got a stepmother eventually who was very loving. Given she was born in 1868, Bell had an extraordinary education - she had one outside of the home - including graduating with first class Honours in History from Oxford, the first woman to do so. She was bored at home and so she took to travelling, usually to places where the family had connections, at first in Europe. She took up mountaineering and was the first to attempt, and the first to complete, several climbs in the Alps. Not the first woman, the first (with her guides).
Eventually, Bell ended up in the Middle East - Mesopotamia as the British called it - and she undertook several voyages across the desert, visiting tribes and investigating archaeological sites and going places where few, if any, European travellers had ever been - and certainly no European women. She learnt Arabic and befriended sheikhs and learned about tribal relationships and mapped areas extensively. All of this came in handy in WW1 when the British wanted to use this area to get at the Turks, who of course were on the side of Germany; Bell got an official position as an adviser. And then after WW1, amid the machinations of what to do with this area with the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire, Bell was there, trying to guide the British to guide the Arabic people to self-determination and independence.
It's clear that Bell was not always a nice person to be around. She was very dismissive of women who did not meet her standards - boring little wives - which of course was incredibly unfair given the systemic prejudices women were dealing with, and it seems that Bell sometimes ignored her remarkable privilege in that area. She was also, it seems, quite ignorant of her economic privilege; only someone who doesn't have to worry about money doesn't worry about money. Nonetheless the turnout for her funeral, in Baghdad, testifies to the immense respect she commanded from the British and Arabic populations with whom she had worked for so long. The principal wing of the Iraq Museum was designated the Gertrude Bell Room, because of her tireless work in setting it up and ensuring that archaeological remains would actually remain in Iraq; I can't help but wonder whether this still exists.
I am so glad I got to know about Gertrude Bell.
Regarding the biography itself: I was a bit annoyed, early on, by the way Howell structured her book. Bell never married but came close, early on, getting engaged to a man that her family - when they learned of this - deemed unsuitable because of his debts and financial position; he died soon after in what may, or may not, have been suspicious circumstances (pneumonia after swimming in a river). She also had a non-physical affair with a married man later in life, Dick Doughty-Wylie, whose death at Gallipoli devastated her. My problem was that Howell gave the latter relationship, in particular, its own set of chapters that were quite outside of the chronology: outlining all of the torturous ins and outs, and then going back to fill in where she was - like travelling across the desert or working for the Red Cross in France during WW1 - while she was being in love. This, for me, prioritises the romantic angle above the other things in her life, and that doesn't make sense. Even if Howell is right in suggesting that some things Bell did in order to prove herself to, or provoke, Doughty-Wylie, to separate events out artificially doesn't do justice to Bell's amazing life. And I do think that Howell emphasises Bell's connection to Doughty-Wylie a bit much - to the point that the last paragraph of the entire bio reflects on one evening they had together in Bell's childhood home, rather than on the fact that Bell was the Honorary Director of Antiquities for Iraq, say, whose death prompted a letter to her parents from the King and Queen of England and a statement from the Colonial Secretary in the House of Commons.
It is, overall, a well-written biography, and one I immensely enjoyed. Everyone should know about about Gertrude Bell.
theshortlady's review against another edition
1.0
I like history and historical biography as audio books for my commute. I wanted to like this one, but Jean Gilpin ruined it for me. I hate her reading with the passion of a thousand white hot suns. Her style can only be described consciously artful. I don't need Ms. Gilpin to show me what things are interesting or "amazing" by emphasizing words. Her style is more suited to the Castle of Otranto or a Harlequin romance than a non-fiction book.
emthomas26's review against another edition
3.0
I learned a lot about an inspiring woman but this was tough going at some points - it's very dense, and more challenging without knowing the history of the region.
mamurray's review against another edition
4.0
Amazing women that everyone should be aware of. Keeping track of all the players in the Middle East can be difficult but it’s an important read and worth the work. Lots to be learned about WWI, the creation of Iraq, middle eastern politics not to mention Gertrude’s adventures climbing the Alps and exploring unknown parts of Arabia.
ar2chn30713's review against another edition
4.0
This is a fantastically researched biographical work. It is very in-depth and the research is extremely scholarly. However, my only complaint with this work is that in several places in the book, the timeline is rather fuzzy. I understand that the author is trying to explain certain points of Gertrude's life with more clarity, but it does make it a little difficult to understand when certain things are happening and within what context, i.e. her relationships with men as well as her experiences mountain climbing. The book regains its momentum when discussing the situation in the Middle East. It would have been interesting to see some discussion of the politics of modern day Iraq, as well as connections to British and American policies currently. However, it was a very scholarly work which was also a pleasure to read.
cristinasuarezmunoz's review against another edition
4.0
“When Aunt Mary invited her to join the Lascelleses again, this time in Persia, she was ecstatic. It would be her first encounter with the East.”
Biographies aren't my thing *shrugs* but I'm so glad I took a chance on this one!
Never heard of Gertrude Bell? Don't worry, neither had I, until I saw the movie trailer. After reading this book, it's a real shame we don't know more about this gal but I'm hoping the film will bring much needed attention to who she is and the impact she made on the 20th Century.
I've seen Lawrence of Arabia a number of times and I don't recall her ever being mentioned in the film. *gasp* I will have to re-watch it just to be 100% certain. You could say that Gertrude Bell was completely overshadowed by T.E. Lawrence or quite possibly forgotten because she's a woman.
Since I had zero expectations, this book gives details about all the different stages of her life and I thought it would be more about what she did in the Middle East, specifically with Iraq. I'm not sure that I needed to know all the details of her life but I was completely captivated with everything she did upon arriving to the Middle East. Quite honestly, it's fascinating. She's fascinating.
While she lived a life of privilege and could do so many of the things that her status afforded her, she was way ahead of her time on so many different levels. She did things that women simply did not even think of doing back then. Not only was she incredibly smart but she was also an amazing diplomat and was King Faisal's confidante. I can't help but wonder if the borders she helped create (and she didn't do it alone) and how the government of Iraq should be operated, if that contributed to all the unrest happening in present-day Iraq.
Regardless, she's still amazing.
If I could only go back in time to meet her and maybe have some tea...
Biographies aren't my thing *shrugs* but I'm so glad I took a chance on this one!
Never heard of Gertrude Bell? Don't worry, neither had I, until I saw the movie trailer. After reading this book, it's a real shame we don't know more about this gal but I'm hoping the film will bring much needed attention to who she is and the impact she made on the 20th Century.
I've seen Lawrence of Arabia a number of times and I don't recall her ever being mentioned in the film. *gasp* I will have to re-watch it just to be 100% certain. You could say that Gertrude Bell was completely overshadowed by T.E. Lawrence or quite possibly forgotten because she's a woman.
Since I had zero expectations, this book gives details about all the different stages of her life and I thought it would be more about what she did in the Middle East, specifically with Iraq. I'm not sure that I needed to know all the details of her life but I was completely captivated with everything she did upon arriving to the Middle East. Quite honestly, it's fascinating. She's fascinating.
While she lived a life of privilege and could do so many of the things that her status afforded her, she was way ahead of her time on so many different levels. She did things that women simply did not even think of doing back then. Not only was she incredibly smart but she was also an amazing diplomat and was King Faisal's confidante. I can't help but wonder if the borders she helped create (and she didn't do it alone) and how the government of Iraq should be operated, if that contributed to all the unrest happening in present-day Iraq.
Regardless, she's still amazing.
If I could only go back in time to meet her and maybe have some tea...
keegan_rellim_taylor's review against another edition
4.0
Am I just completely uneducated that I had no idea who this woman was before my aunt mentioned reading this book? Do other people recognize the name of Gertrude Bell? Well, we should! What an amazing woman: rock climber, archaeologist, explorer, writer, and major contributor to the establishment of an Iraqi government!
Her love life saddened me, both as an unfortunate situation for her (to fall in love with a married man) and as a horrible betrayal both on her part and the part of Doughty-Wylie (even if the relationship was never consummated, from a wife's perspective, still definitely cheating). But in every other way, she fascinated me and amazed me. Read about her. She's incredible.
Oh, and I loved that the author quoted both Bell and her contemporaries' thoughts about Bell so much. I admit I was a tad lost on all the tribes and people that she met, but the author did her best to keep me straight on them all and I certainly could follow the most important people in her life, so that was good enough. Fantastic biography!
Her love life saddened me, both as an unfortunate situation for her (to fall in love with a married man) and as a horrible betrayal both on her part and the part of Doughty-Wylie (even if the relationship was never consummated, from a wife's perspective, still definitely cheating). But in every other way, she fascinated me and amazed me. Read about her. She's incredible.
Oh, and I loved that the author quoted both Bell and her contemporaries' thoughts about Bell so much. I admit I was a tad lost on all the tribes and people that she met, but the author did her best to keep me straight on them all and I certainly could follow the most important people in her life, so that was good enough. Fantastic biography!