Rave
Jeffrey Brown,
The Washington Post
...vividly captures the history and strangeness of this place in a fast-paced narrative that gets us behind today’s headlines of war and terror. This is part reportage and travelogue, part intellectual history, part geopolitical tract and part out-and-out thriller..
Positive
Ben MacIntyre,
The New York Times Book Review
...part history, part scholarly adventure story and part journalistic survey of the volatile religious politics of the Maghreb region. The title is quite irritating; the rest of it is very good.
Positive
David Wright,
The Seattle Times
There’s no need to reveal here just how these brave librarians and citizens managed to smuggle 377,000 intact manuscripts out of harm’s way past a brutal totalitarian regime, through lawless wilderness and war zones to Mali’s capital city of Bamako far to the south. Suffice it to say that they earn their 'bad ass' sobriquet several times over. Riveting skulduggery, revealing history and current affairs combine in a compelling narrative with a rare happy ending. So far..
Positive
Bill Marvel,
The Dallas Morning News
There are nail-biting moments when everything hangs in the balance, and the author makes the most of these. One can almost imagine the movie version. Some photographs of the elegant calligraphy and bejeweled splendor of the manuscripts would have enhanced the story; a map or two would help. A fine PBS documentary a few years ago by Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, The Road to Timbuktu, introduced this cultural treasure to many in the Eurocentric West. Hammer’s book is an excellent place to catch up on the story..
Positive
Jean Marie Brown,
The Philadelphia Inquirer
A former Newsweek bureau chief and foreign correspondent, Joshua Hammer possesses a knowledge of the Middle East and North Africa, Islam and jihadists, that gives the book authority and authenticity.
Mixed
Julie Hakin Azzam,
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Mr. Hammer has conducted many interviews with Mr. Haidara and other participants, and has spent considerable time in Mali. This is no parachute journalism or detached academic study; Librarians is marked by the careful detail of time spent steeped in a place.