Book Review
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Review: Hidden Hand – How The Chinese Communist Party is Reshaping The World – by Clive Hamilton & Mareike Ohlberg

As a committed sinophile, this recently written book seemed a necessity. As China continues its rise to being the most dominant national force economically on the planet, it is quite difficult to obtain meaningful and relevant and unbiased factual information about its thoughts and the thoughts of its governing Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Aside from… Continue reading
Belt and Road initiative, BRI, Cardiff University, CCP, China, Chinese, Chinese Communist Party, Chinese foreign policy, cold war, Communism, Communist, Confucius, Confucius Institute, Conservative, david davies, David Davis, foreign policy, global politics, Iron Curtain, Jessica Morden, Ji Xinping, Ji Xinping thought, John Griffiths, Labour, Liz Truss, Mandarin, Mandarin Chinese, Politics, sinophile, Taiwan, Tianamen, Tibet, U.K. -
Review: Behind The Enigma – The Authorised History of GCHQ – Britain’s Secret Cyber-Intelligence Agency – by John Ferris

This is a weighty tome (800 plus pages) and the authoritative history of perhaps the least glamorous of the U.K.’s principal security services. However, the facts illustrated in this book clearly demonstrates the critical role GCHQ plays in national security and perhaps one could argue is more relevant and more important than its more glamorous… Continue reading
Alan Turing, Arabic, Argentina, Australia, Bletchley Park, Canada, Cheltenham, China, Chinese, COMINT, Commonwealth, computers, cryptanalytic, cryptography, cyberattack, cybersecurity, cyberwarfare, Enigma, espionage, Falklands, Five Eyes, GCHQ, German, Germany, hacking, HUMINT, indonesia, intelligence, Islam, islamic jihad, Israel, Jihad, Jihadists, John Ferris, Konfrontasi, languages, linguists, Mandarin Chinese, maths, MI5, mi6, Military, National Secuirty Agency, Nazi, New Zealand, NSA, Palestine, Russia, Salafi, SIGINT, Soviet Union, spy, tech warfare, Translation, U.K., UKUSA, United Kingdom, United STates of America, USA, USSR, World War 2 -
Review: The Near East Since The First World War – by M.E.Yapp

This book was written in 1990 and is thus a bit dated. The postscript announces the start of the first Gulf War after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Post World War 1 saw most of the current political boundaries drawn in the Near East or as we now most predominantly label it, the Middle East.… Continue reading
Arab, Arabic, Ayatollah, Ba'ath, Bahrain, Britain, British Empire, colonial, Egypt, empire, France, iran, Iranian Revolution, Iraq, Israel, Israeli, Jew, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, middle east, Near East, notables, oil, Politics, Qatar, religion, Revolution, saudi arabia, Suez, Syria, twentieth century, U.K., UAE, United Arab Emirates, war, World War 1, Yapp, Yemen -
Review: Gommorah – Italy’s Other Mafia – by Roberto Saviano

Roberto Saviano is the Italian Salman Rushdie. After writing his exposé on the Neapolitan mafia that is the subject of this book, Gomorrah, Saviano had serious death threats from organised crime and had to go into hiding and lives under security protection to this day. He is only a young man and is a patriotic… Continue reading
agriculture, Camorra, Cartel, cartels, China, COcaine, Colombia, Cosa Nostra, crime, environment, Europe, fake, Fashion, Gommorah, heroin, Italian Mafia, Italy, junkie, landfill, Made in Italy, mafia, Mexico, murder, Naples, Napoli, narcotics, Ndragheta, Neapolitan, omerta, Organised Crime, Roberto Saviano, Salmon Rushdie, textiles, toxic, waste disposal -
Review: Stasiland – Stories from Behind the Berlin Wall – by Anna Funder

The Stasi were the brutal secret police in the GDR (German Democratic Republic) or East Germany. After the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, East and West Germany once again became reunited. Funder is an Australian journalist who, in this award-winning book, explores the Stasi at work… Continue reading
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Review: Maori Myths and Legendary Tales – by A.W.Reed

My mother is from New Zealand so therefore I’m half Kiwi. This book explores some of the Maori Myths and legends that existed mainly in oral tradition before the arrival to Aeteorora of the White European Pakeha settlers. The Maori history goes back to their ancient homes in other Polynesian Islands. The Maori heroes include… Continue reading
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Review: The Divine Spark – Psychedelics, Consciousness and the Birth of Civilisation – by Graham Hancock

This book, edited by one of my literary heroes, Graham Hancock, is a collection of stories focussed mainly on the expansion of consciousness by the use of psychedelics, especially the Amazonian, ‘Vine of the Soul’, Ayahuasca. The authors range from Hancock himself to the well-renowned Dennis McKenna, to British social celebrity Russell Brand. The essays… Continue reading
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Review: The Third Man and The Fallen Idol – by Graham Greene

Graham Greene is a classic early twentieth century English novelist. I remember studying Brighton Rock for my school GCSEs.The Third Man is set in the murky underworld of post World War 2 Vienna. The Austrian capital has been quartered into four allied zones: English, French, American and Russian. A front of the Cold War there… Continue reading
assassin, Austria, Brighton Rock, Britain, cold war, Colonel Calloway, DRUGS DRUG DEALING RACKET, France, funeral, Graham Greene, Harry lIME, Hungarian, Londion, murder, Nazi, PENICILLIN, polceman, police, ROLLO MARTINS, Russia, sewer, Soviet Union, Suicide, the fallen idol, the third man, U.K., USA, Vienna
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