Ariel Sharon

(Author)
Available
Product Details
Price
$23.99  $22.31
Publisher
St. Martin's Griffin
Publish Date
Pages
320
Dimensions
5.85 X 8.87 X 0.83 inches | 1.19 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781403984975

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author

Uri Dan was an accomplished reporter and contributor to the New York Post, the Jerusalem Post, and to the Israeli daily Ma'ariv. He wrote a number of books including To the Promised Land, Blood Libel, and Eichmann Syndrome. He passed away in December 2006.

Reviews

"interesting and revealing..." --The New York Post

"Whenever I needed to reach Ariel Sharon in a hurry, I would call Uri Dan and he would hand his cell phone to Arik. Uri was closer to this great Israeli than any other adviser or unabashed journalistic supporter, and their 50 year collaboration comes through loud and clear in this insider's biography." --William Safire

"In his poignant and fascinating new book, Dan has drawn from over 50 years of personal memories to produce insightful, indeed loving, snapshots of the life of Ariel Sharon, one of the most significant and remarkable personalities in modern Jewish History. . . . Authenticity shines through Dan's book . . . [his] descriptions of combat ring true. . . . Dan's Sharon embodies the saga of Israel: personal tragedy, heroism, a wrestling with timeless moral issues, and above all, a struggle for survival as a Jew in a Jewish State." --Robert Morgenthau, District Attorney, New York County

"The words you have written over a period of more than fifty years captivatingly recount a personal experience that few others have enjoyed. Better still: they have timelessly captured the crucial moments in the historic process of the rebirth of the Jewish nation in its country." --Ariel Sharon

"A book of conversations with Sharon that takes readers through his words and thought processes during the events that became integral parts of Israel's history, as if they were proverbial fly on the wall." --The Jerusalem Post