Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Book

Throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th, the Russian and British Empires played out a chess game of diplomacy, espionage, and military thrusts into Central Asia to protect their expanding interests. When play began, the frontiers of their empires lay 2,000 miles apart, across vast deserts and almost impassable mountain ranges; by the end, they were separated by only 20 miles. Karl E. Meyer of The New York Times and Shareen Blair Brysac, documentary filmmaker for CBS, update and significantly expand earlier studies of the imperial rivalry, notably Peter Hopkirk's pioneering The Great Game. Tournament of Shadows reads like a racy adventure story, yet there is no need for the authors to embellish their well-researched facts. The region attracted a host of bizarre characters, each with his own idiosyncratic goals. The authors begin with the journey to Bokhara of an ambitious horse doctor, hired by the East India Company in 1806 to improve its breeding stock, and end with the CIA's assistance to anti-Chinese guerrillas in Tibet during the cold war. American participants in the opening of Central Asia have not previously received much attention, but Tournament of Shadows introduces adventurers such as William Rockhill, commissioned by the Smithsonian Institution in the 1880s to explore Tibet, and William McGovern, who, to the chagrin of the British, reached Lhasa in 1923. The wealth and instability of Central Asia continue to keep the region in the headlines, motivating the Soviet Union's disastrous 10-year intervention in Afghanistan and fueling an international race for resources--especially oil--today. --John StevensonRead More

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    "Much more than a magisterial work of scholarship: it is an absorbing inquiry into men and motives that is one part le Carr?, one part Indiana Jones." (Jason Goodwin, New York Times Book Review) From the romantic conflicts of the Victorian Great Game to the war-torn history of the region in recent decades, Tournament of Shadows traces the struggle for control of Central Asia and Tibet from the 1830s to the present. The original Great Game, the clandestine struggle between Russia and Britain for mastery of Central Asia, has long been regarded as one of the greatest geopolitical conflicts in history. Many believed that control of the vast Eurasian heartland was the key to world dominion. The original Great Game ended with the Russian Revolution, but the geopolitical struggles in Central Asia continue to the present day. In this updated edition, the authors reflect on Central Asia's history since the end of the Russo-Afghan war, and particularly in the wake of 9/11.

    "Well-written and fair-minded.... The sheer sweep of the contest, its imperial scale and its exhilaration, are admirably conveyed." (New York Review of Books)

    "Tournament of Shadows teems with highly readable, half-forgotten yet fascinating incidents.... [An] absorbing chronicle of almost two centuries of geopolitical turmoil in Central Asia." (Boston Globe)

  • 0465045766
  • 9780465045761
  • Karl E. Meyer, Shareen Blair Brysac
  • 21 February 2006
  • Basic Books
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 704
  • New edition
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