
The Six-Day War
The Breaking of the Middle East
Author: Guy Laron
Narrator: William Hughes
Unabridged: 15 hr 27 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 02/21/2017

Author: Guy Laron
Narrator: William Hughes
Unabridged: 15 hr 27 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 02/21/2017
Guy Laron is a writer and a lecturer in the department of international relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His articles have appeared in scholarly journals such as Third World Quarterly, Journal of Cold War Studies, and International Journal of Middle East Studies. Previously, he was a visiting assistant professor at Northwestern University and a visiting fellow at University of Oxford.
William Hughes is an AudioFile Earphones Award–winning narrator. A professor of political science at Southern Oregon University in Ashland, Oregon, he received his doctorate in American politics from the University of California at Davis. He has done voice-over work for radio and film and is also an accomplished jazz guitarist.
This book is not really about the war itself, but the political mechanisms that led to the war. Mr. Laron spends a lot of time covering different aspects of the war, and the different players in a scatterbrained way. There is no real clear transition between talking about Egypt to Syria to Israel to......more
The six day war , it was mainly about the events both political and economic situation and the leading personalities of that time. Not much about the war at all, but still interesting seeing familiar stories about leaders Rabin, Day an, Bresnev being told from Larons research, anyway found it intere......more
I was in the Army stationed in Georgia during the Six-Day War. I and others I served with followed with interest the ominous runup to the war, the movement of Egyptian units into the Sinai, the harassing border incursions by the Syrians, and the disturbing late alliance of Jordan with Egypt. When th......more
An excellent, largely unbiased book. I see some reviewers stating it's too critical of Israel, and it makes me wonder if we read the same book. It is consistently critical of the governments that attacked Israel, but is also critical of the Israeli military and political establishments. Laron's argu......more
“In this fine work, Guy Laron, a young historian at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, takes a fresh look at the war and its causes…Like all the best history, Laron’s book is studded with fascinating facts and anecdotes that shed light on his theories.” Sunday Times (London)
“Since the thirty-year declassification rule opened up the Israel State Archives to researchers in 1997, a number of books…have recast the David and Goliath myth that had risen up around the events of May and June 1967. Israel is no longer seen as the weak and passive actor threatened with a second Holocaust and forced into a pre-emptive attack, but as a confident strategist taking advantage of Egypt and Syria’s blundering brinkmanship to fulfill a long-planned expansion…A new history of the lead-up to the war by Guy Laron, The Six-Day War…reinforces this narrative..This was a boost to uncompromising nationalistic visions on both sides, giving birth to a messianic settler movement and violent strains of Palestinian terrorism.” New York Times
“A lively study…his work is to be commended.” American Historical Review
“Israel today has a raft of ‘post-Zionist’ academics and journalists for whom everything the country has done is a standing moral reproach. Writing more in sorrow than in anger, Guy Laron takes a different approach, examining how and why the war occurred at all.” Literary Review (London)
“Both impressive and disheartening…it should be required reading for President-elect Donald Trump. Readers will learn that it’s sometimes much easier for leaders to go to war than to make peace…At the very least, we ordinary citizens should read it.” Jewish News Service
“Drawing upon interdisciplinary knowledge and exhaustive archival research, The Six-Day War is a sober, edifying, and highly recommended contribution to public and college library audiobook collections.” Midwest Book Review
“The author looks beyond Cold War maneuvering to examine the conflict in other lights, including the economic…Laron connects many of those events to current trends and developments, including Israel’s ‘cult of the offensive.’” Kirkus Reviews
“Scholars of political economy, US foreign relations, Middle East history, and international relations will find much food for thought here.” H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews