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Daughter of the Desert: The Remarkable Life of Gertrude Bell
 
 
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Daughter of the Desert: The Remarkable Life of Gertrude Bell [Hardcover]

Georgina Howell
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Sunday Times

'Bell's journeys are skillfully evoked and the unfolding of Middle East politics well placed...Exemplary'

Daily Express

‘The combination of epic scene and personal drama makes Georgina
Howell’s saga a winner.’

Sunday Telegraph Seven

'You don't have to share Gertrude Bell's passions in order to be
her biographer, but it helps'

Metro

'In the current climate Bell's part in creating modern-day Iraq is
particularly resonant.'

Traveller Magazine

'Hers is a story well worth telling, and Georgina Howell has done
it superbly in this book'

The Economist

'Excellent...[written] with a skill and clarity worthy of her
heroine'

Spectator

'Howell...writes with greater confidence and authority on Bell'

Wanderlust

'the extracts from her letters- smart, passionate,
self-depracating- are the best thing about this'

Oxford Times

'A remarkable story...told engagingly and often first-hand via the
extensive use of Bell's own prodigious written output'

Catholic Herald

'The intrepid and eventful life of Gertrude Bell is a biographer's
dream'

Product Description

The riveting story of an adventurer who refused to accept the constrictions of her class and age

Book Description

At a time when women were still largely excluded from both education and the workplace, Gertrude Bell was an archaeologist, spy, Arabist, linguist, author, poet, photographer and mountaineer - but until the Iraq War of 2003 few people had heard her name. During the course of her extraordinary life she not only abandoned her privileged background of country house parties and debutante balls to become one of the first women to graduate from Oxford; she also travelled into the desert as an archaeologist, where through her command of Arabic and knowledge of tribal affiliations she became indispensable to the Cairo Office of the British government. A friend of T.E. Lawrence, she later advised the Viceroy of India and, during the First World War, travelled from Delhi to the front line in Mesopotamia where she took up and steadily upheld the principle of an autonomous Arab nation for Iraq, promoting and manipulating the election of King Faisal to the throne and helping to draw the borders of the fledgling state.

About the Author

Georgina Howell has spent her life working in magazine journalism, from Fashion Editor of the Observer to Features Editor of Vogue . She has worked for the Sunday Times and Tatler and is a prolific feature writer. She lives in London and Brittany.
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