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Adrift

How Our World Lost Its Way

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The bestselling author of The Crusades Through Arab Eyes traces how civilizations have drifted apart throughout the 20th century and now lack the solidarity to address global threats to humankind.

"Maalouf is a thoughtful, humane and passionate interlocutor." — The New York Times Book Review

The United States is on the verge of losing all moral credibility. The European Union is in the process of breaking apart. The Arab world is embroiled in crisis. Thus divided and lacking solidarity, humanity is unable to address global threats to the environment and our health. How did we get here and what is yet to come? World-renowned scholar and bestselling author of The Crusades Through Arab Eyes, Amin Maalouf, is awake to the dangerous consequences we are about to face. In Adrift, Maalouf traces how civilizations have drifted apart throughout the 20th century, mixing personal narrative and historical analysis to provide a warning signal for the future.
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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from July 15, 2020
      The Lebanese-born French author offers a pensive, lyrical meditation on a dying world. The author of brilliant novels and books of essays such as Disordered World, Maalouf announces his theme at the outset: "I was born hale and healthy into the arms of a dying civilization, and I have spent my whole life feeling that I am surviving, with no credit or blame, when around me so many things were falling into ruin." At first, he means the vanished civilization of the Levant, where Christians, Jews, and Arabs once lived together but that has since collapsed in ethnocidal battles and sectarian wars. "The Levantine ideal," writes Maalouf, "as my people experienced it, as I have always wanted to live it, demands that each person assume full responsibility for his own, and a little responsibility for others." No more. Born in Beirut in 1949, a Maronite Christian, Maalouf lived in the Egypt of Gamal Abdel Nasser, "the last colossus of the Arab world," who ultimately failed in his mission to unite it; in adulthood, Maalouf moved to Paris, where he has lived for decades. Egypt, he writes, "was doomed to crumble," while Lebanon's ecumenicalism gave way to narrow self-interest and appeals to outsiders of one's own ethnicity for support--Arabs calling for Arabs and Jews for Jews, which Maalouf likens to various Swiss cantons calling on their German, French, and Italian neighbors for intercession, which would spell doom for the Swiss Confederation. The analogy is apposite, for the rest of the world is also suffering collapse. "In the era in which we live," writes the author, "despair can sweep across oceans, scale walls, cross any frontier, physical or mental, and it is not easily contained." Ideals of democracy, citizenship, environmental health, world peace, and the like now fall before nationalism, authoritarianism, and the decline of private life in the Orwellian present. A Camus for our time, Maalouf urges that civilization is "fragile, shimmering, evanescent"--and perhaps doomed.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • OverDrive Read
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  • English

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