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The Bin Ladens

The Bin LadensAn Arabian Family in the American Century

Written by

Steve Coll

Narrated by

Erik Singer

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Avg: 4.5 (3 ratings)

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Audiobook Download Information

Edition:
Abridged (Penguin Audio)
Length:
10 hours, 35 minutes
File Size:
291 MB (9 files)
Published:
April 2008

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Review by Dave Daley, eMusic

Two sides of a family, two very different directions.
At the moment Flight 77 smashed into the Pentagon, Shafiq bin Laden — Osama’s brother — was at the Washington D.C. Ritz-Carlton, attending an investors conference sponsored by the Carlyle Group, the global equity firm heavily connected with members of former President George H. W. Bush’s administration. Another brother, Abdullah, a graduate of Harvard Law School, was in line for a latte at a Cambridge Starbucks.

Two sides of a family, two very different directions. It’s well-known that the Bin Laden family made mega-millions building Saudi Arabia’s infrastructure as oil revenues exploded, thanks to an assiduous courtship of the Saudi royal family and American decision makers. Osama bin Laden, of course, irate over the presence of U.S. troops in the kingdom during the first Gulf War, broke with his family and declared war on America. But what Steve Coll describes in such rich detail in “The Bin Ladens” is exactly how Westernized the rest of the family remains.

Coll, a New Yorker writer who won the Pulitzer Prize for Ghost Wars (his history of American bumbling in Afghanistan), uncovers the family’s mind-blowing ties to the West. This is a story of Hollywood, Disneyland and the Ivy League, of investments in shopping malls and thoroughbreds, of friendships and partnerships with presidents (Bush, Carter), moguls (Trump) and country singers (Kenny Rogers). The bitter irony? No matter how the family denounces Obama, 9/11 proved to be great business; war in the Middle East has only made “the kingdom’s Halliburton” wealthier and more powerful.

Quotes from the Critics

"Urgent and important reading." - Kirkus Reviews

"Beneath the clutter, one discerns an engrossing portrait of a family torn between tradition and modernity, conformism and self-actualization, and desperately in search of its soul." - Publishers Weekly

"[T]hrough government papers and interviews with various bin Laden associates, [Coll] gives us a judicious, painstaking and vivid picture of an exotic family pulled in two directions by world events." - New York Times Book Review

"THE BIN LADENS is not so much a book about Osama bin Laden himself, or his terrorist network and political aspirations, as about the power structures of modern Saudi Arabia. And in this it is most informative." - New York Review of Books

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