Guests of the Ayatollah: The Iran Hostage Crisis: The First Battle in America's War with Militant Islam
Guests of the Ayatollah: The Iran Hostage Crisis: The First Battle in America's War with Militant Islam book cover

Guests of the Ayatollah: The Iran Hostage Crisis: The First Battle in America's War with Militant Islam

Paperback – Bargain Price, March 13, 2007

Price
$8.59
Format
Paperback
Pages
704
Publisher
Grove Press
Publication Date
ISBN-10
802143032
Dimensions
8.98 x 6.35 x 1.51 inches
Weight
2 pounds

Description

“A riveting account of the 444-day Iran hostage crisis of 1979. . . . Bowden’s latest will tempt readers to keep turning the pages. Altogether excellent -- and its revelations of back-channel diplomatic dealings are newsworthy.”xa0 -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)“Suspenseful, inspiring, mordant and, perhaps most of all, affectionate toward those who had to endure such trying circumstances. He shows unfailing respect for the hostages, many of whom gave him extensive, intimate and at times embarrassing access to their memories. Mr. Bowden lets you feel, above all else, the fear and anger of the Americans during their long imprisonment. . . . Bowden performs a great service by pulling us back in time, to the dawn of an awful age when America was low and radical Island triumphant.” —Reuel Marc Gerecht, The Wall Street Journal“Bowden does a good job of describing the divergent orbits of Iran and the West. Iran's revolutionary regime seems to know it cannot survive in any kind of normal atmosphere, and America seems too vengeful to accept that Iran may have legitimate grievances over American actions in the Middle East. The hostage crisis epitomised that divide.” —The Economist“More than 26 years later, the siege of the embassy might seem like irrelevant history to those who know little or nothing about it. As talented journalist Mark Bowden shows, the standoff involving 52 American hostages is anything but irrelevant.” —Steve Weinberg, San Francisco Chronicle“Bowden’s mammoth feat of reportage on the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979-81 is essential reading . . . Bowden shows unparalleled skill in constructing an omniscient and engrossing narrative based on an almost daily account of the plight of the hostages, behind-the-scenes political machinations, and the planning of a rescue mission. A.” —Gilbert Cruz, Entertainment Weekly“[A] riveting . . . masterfully told tale . . . Bowden skillfully gets inside the minds of the hostages, vividly describing their churning emotions and harrowing experiences. Fans of the author of Black Hawk Down and Killing Pablo will see plenty of classic Bowden here: meticulous reporting backed by a compelling narrative . . . Bowden skillfully evokes the era and the ordeal.” —Afshin Molavi, The Washington Post“Bleakly compelling . . . [Bowden] writes about events in a way that gives a clear picture of both high-level decision making and the price paid by people on the ground. . . . And 26 years after the [hostage crisis] the passions of the moment still reverberate. In Bowden’s book, you can feel them on every page.” —Richard Lacayo, Time“Mark Bowden is a master storyteller, exceptionally skilled at placing military and political events in a meaningful context. Thus, Guests of the Ayatollah may be his most timely and valuable work to date. . . . A must read.” —Edward A. Turzanski, The Philadelphia Inquirer“Heart-stopping, and heart-breaking.” —James Traub, New York Times Book Review“A refreshingly lively account . . .Bowden won praise a few years back for Black Hawk Down, a gritty and up-close account of U.S. combat in Somalia in October 1993. Much of [Guests of the Ayatollah] is similarly gritty and up close. . . . But this time, Bowden pulls his account back from time to time to give the larger picture . . . Bowden’s skill turns bad news into good reading.” —Harry Levins, St. Louis Post-Dispatch“Bowden reaffirms his role as tough-guy Cassandra with this heft replay of the hostage crisis in Iran that began in 1979. . . . [Guests of the Ayatollah is] made essential by continuing American-Iranian tensions.” —Janet Maslin, The New York Times“Bowden’s account excels at describing the unfolding drama of the individual hostages. . . . This s a powerful and probably definitive history that deserves a large audience.” —Christopher Willcox, The New York Sun“Gripping … a genuine pleasure to read … Bowden’s look back at Jimmy Carter’s Iran policy gives the book its particular political relevance. Certain similarities with the dilemmas of America’s current Iran policy are impossible to overlook.” ––Matthias Kuntzel, Policy Review“Bowden is a courageous and methodical journalist and gifted storyteller….He weaves a maddeningly complicated heap of recollections, emotions and facts into a coherent, credible and engaging account….It is a timely addition to our collective knowledge about America and Iran’s shared, though painful, history.” —Brian Palmer, Newsday“Just as he did with his account of the desperate battle that waged between American forces and Islamic fighters in Somalia in Black Hawk Down, Mark Bowden takes his readers inside the action—and inaction—inside the hostage crisis in Guests of the Ayatollah.” —Tom Walker, Denver Post“A thriller.” —Richard Willing, USA Today“Mark Bowden is a master of calamity, and he will have readers chewing their nails like teenagers as they read Guests of the Ayatollah. . . . Yet Bowden does more than spin a good yarn . . . He nails the moment at which radical Islamists first learned they could use terror and anti-Americanism to immobilize the West and claim victory over domestic rivals.” —Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman, San Diego Union Tribune“An impressive piece of narrative journalism.” —Michael B. Farrell, Christian Science Monitor“Readers may wonder why they should read a blow-by-blow account of an event so widely reported so long ago. But as the story unfolds, illuminated by journalist Mark Bowden’s meticulous reporting and measured prose, what seems familiar is suddenly fresh. The significance crystallizes. Uncannily, the events prefigure those of the post-Sept. 11 era: the initial ‘why do they hate us?’ shock; the impotent outrage; the sense that we suddenly faced a baffling and unexpected threat, and that harsh—even reckless—measures were needed to confront it. It was, in retrospect, a defining moment for the United States.” —Douglas Birch, The Baltimore Sun“A very good book . . . A complex story full of cruelty, heroism, foolishness and tragic misunderstandings.” —Len Barcousky, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette“One of Bowden’s accomplishments is conveying simultaneously the often boring daily-ness of the hostages’ lives, while building melodrama about whether they will undergo torture, die or survive to return to loved ones across the United States….Bowden draws conclusions from is extensive research, conslusions that might become controversial but that surely provide lots of grist for thought.” —Steve Weinberg, The Seattle Times“Guests of the Ayatollah may be the most revealing book ever written about desperate hostages on the brink.” —Ike Seamans, The Miami Herald“Americans are told over and over that 9/11 changed everything and, in important ways, it did. But as Mark Bowden points out in this monumental piece of research, writing and reasoning, they might give 11/4 some consideration, too. On that date, Nov. 4, 1979, a ragtag band of Iranian militants, most of them students, invaded the sprawling United States embassy in downtown Tehran and seized everyone inside as hostages. . . . Bowden does a prodigious job, telling an important story …, and barring the unlikely, nobody will ever tell it better.” —Bill Bell, New York Daily News“Bowden offers lessons applicable to global politics today.” —Vikas Turakhia, Cleveland Plain Dealer“A superbly readable and surprisingly suspenseful account….A master storyteller.” —David Forsmark, Front Page Magazne“A magisterial work of historical journalism. It should instantly become the definitive account of an event that ruined the Carter presidency, confirming the Iranian theocracy, emboldened a generation of Islamic radicals, spurred Saudi Arabia’s aggressive promotion of Sunni Wahhabism…and presaged the central challenge to post-Cold War U.S. foreign policy. It is also a crackling bit of storytelling…Bowden has an almost Tom Wolfeian flair for detail and a knack for shaking every last recollection, however awkward or discomforting, out of his subjects….the prose is gripping… He humanizes the U.S. captives in a manner that is both poignant and baldly frank.” —Duncan Currie, The National Review“Riveting drama and telling detail…It is a masterful account that includes its share of revelations, but never veers far from the intensely personal stories that took place behind the scenes….Seems destined for lofty residence on the summer’s best-seller lists, further cementing Bowden’s reputation as one of America’s finest print journalists.” —John Marshall, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer“A prodigious achievement in reporting….Compelling.” —Craig McLaughlin, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette“This remarkably well-done book represents a new pinnacle in Bowden’s career as the finest narrative journalist working today. All the skills on display in his previous books…are showcased in this one, but Bowden has created a substantially more sweeping and sophisticated work than his earlier projects….He is meticulous and detail-oriented without dwelling on the irrelevant or boring, and thorough in his exploration of people and events without sacrificing the pace of the story. Bowden is a virtuoso storyteller.” —Noah Pollak, Azure“A good and important book.” —Ed Graziano, Richmond Times Dispatch“Written like a novel and shot through with page-turning suspe...

Features & Highlights

  • From the best-selling author of Black Hawk Down comes a riveting, definitive chronicle of the Iran hostage crisis, America’s first battle with militant Islam. On November 4, 1979, a group of radical Islamist students, inspired by the revolutionary Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini, stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran. They took fifty-two Americans hostage, and kept nearly all of them hostage for 444 days. In
  • Guests of the Ayatollah
  • , Mark Bowden tells this sweeping story through the eyes of the hostages, the soldiers in a new special forces unit sent to free them, their radical, naïve captors, and the diplomats working to end the crisis. Bowden takes us inside the hostages’ cells and inside the Oval Office for meetings with President Carter and his exhausted team. We travel to international capitals where shadowy figures held clandestine negotiations, and to the deserts of Iran, where a courageous, desperate attempt to rescue the hostages exploded into tragic failure. Bowden dedicated five years to this research, including numerous trips to Iran and countless interviews with those involved on both sides.
  • Guests of the Ayatollah
  • is a detailed, brilliantly re-created, and suspenseful account of a crisis that gripped and ultimately changed the world.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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far too long and focused on minute details

Mike Bowden became famous (or at least known to me) for his Black Hawk Down book, now also a movie. Black Hawk Down was all action, fast paced, and also surprisingly short.

Guest of the Ayatollah is monstrously long. Sixty percent of it can be edited out and the book would be at least as good. The most suspenseful action sequence is at the beginning, the takeover of the embassy. The rest is a mind numbing slog documenting every visit to the toilet by each hostage, including what they ate before the said visit, and what they scribbled on the wall when bored. Even the sequence where the US military attempted operation Eagle Claw to rescue the hostages is not well paced - the buildup and execution of the operation are diluted across multiple chapters (because the book tries to be chronological and cover way too many details and characters). Richard Marcinko does a much better job describing the operation in his autobiography.

It seems like the author tried to create the definitive account of the hostage crisis by showing up-close the life and personalities of the hostages and the hostage takers, as well as the political environment around them. However, he misses the forest for the trees sometimes. For example, the Soviet invasion in Afghanistan or the Iran-Iraq war get minimal coverage. What else was going on in the Middle East? What else was happening in the US? What was the role of Iran on the international stage, then and now? Not enough coverage or analysis.

The last chapters surrounding the epilogue are probably the best since the author tries to summarize his own findings from recent visits in Iran and his take on what happened in 1979 and why.

Not recommended unless you are a masochistic history buff.
3 people found this helpful
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An informative history with much pathos, though little victory.

GUESTS OF THE AYATOLLAH is not as exciting as Mark Bowden's BLACK HAWK DOWN, but it is more important. It is an objective account of the sixty-six Americans who were imprisoned after Iranian students stormed the American embassy in Tehran. For fifty-two of these hostages, this hard, sometimes painful experience lasted from November 4, 1979 to January of 1981. Four hundred and forty-four days!

For me it was important not just because I am American and while reading I could easily identify with the hostages, but also because I learned about Iranians. Not all of them are fanatical ignoramuses. Some are no more ignorant than me and my fellow Americans. I learned about the tyranny of the Shah Pahlavi. I learned that Iranians are individuals. Some are reasonably good persons, some are irrationally bad, some are not as bad as others. So if I were president, I would hesitate to push the red button and cook up a dish of instant Persian parking lot. I would be cooking many friendly people.

Much of what Bowden gives us would in other circumstances be boring. I mean the intimate everyday details he provides. But this is about the hostages, which elevates mundaneness to something special. Also, Bowden perks things up with dozens of pertinent anecdotes, and his proficient writing style helps too.

I am thankful for the two drawings, but the drawing of the embassy should have included a compass. I'm still unsure if north is to the bottom or top. Also, the map of Iran should have included more locations from the story; for example, Abadan and Shiraz. Source notes and bibliography seem to be in order, though I did not use them. The index was excellent, but this book should have had an introductory listing of characters, giving easy access to their ages and positions.

I don't know why we got only a few photographs. I would have welcomed more, but maybe they were not available, or maybe more photos of the hostages would impose on privacy.

After reading about the release of the hostages, be sure to continue reading. Only a few pages remain, but they present clear images of what Iran is like today, unless six years have produced radical changes. Again, it's important.
1 people found this helpful
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Warnings of things to come...

This is a long book, yet Mark Bowden manages to keep the pace going and provide an insider's view into the Iran Hostage Crisis. He manages to convey both the day to day story and the larger picture very effectively.
1 people found this helpful
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Definitely a must read

Well researched and engrossing. Loved every minute of it.
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Great , informative book!

Great book. I found it especially interesting and insightful, as someone who was a kid during the Iran hostage crisis, and remembers it strictly through the prism of childhood. The book gives a very detailed description of the embassy takeover and of the long ensuing ordeal of the collective and individual hostages. It also helps to give some historical perspective on why the Iranians hated the US and what events led to the crisis. All in all, a very interesting and informative book.
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Well Documented telling of the story lkargely from the captives point of view--refreshing.

I though Mark Bowden's attempt to tell the stories of the American captives of the 1979 Iranian revolution was an excellent attempt at personalizing what had been an under told story. Sometimes he succeeds brilliantly, as he does with both John Limbert and Mike Metrenko. Each were important for their own reasons, one because he spoke perfect Farsi, the other because he was CIA with extensive contacts in the country, and documents how each of them were treated because of this.

On the other hand he is weak in explaining what some of the captives acted the way they did. There was the young marine sergeant who was extremely cooperative with his jailers, telling all the personal information he had on many of his compatriots. This fact is mentioned, but no effort seems made to get to know or understand that young marine.

All in all, this is a good book with many flaws, only a couple of which were documented here.
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Excellent Read

An incredible narrative of what must have been a very traumatic time for the hostages and the American public as well. Having been born the same year of the embassy takeover, I obviously could not appreciate the significance of this event without living through it, but Bowden's book does an excellent job of putting you in the shoes of the hostages and the diplomats who worked on their release. Yes, it is a long book, but at no point did I feel that it was dragging on. A great book.
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Pulitzer-worthy

I have no idea why this book did not win the Pulizer Prizer.

Easily the best non-fiction that I have read in the past 10 years.