From Paris To Tehran by Ozias Marcovici – Great Research Work #BookReview

Posted on the 03 April 2018 by Jaideep Khanduja @PebbleInWaters

From Paris To Tehran – The Forgotten King: The Fascinating History of Iran, From the Persian Shah to Ayatollah Khomeini’s Revolution (Middle Eastern Politics & Biographies) by Ozias Marcovici is basically the story of Iran. If you have any interest in history, power, politics, turbulence, or Iran, then this book is for you. In fact, in that case, it becomes an important read for you. The farthest era this book touches is 559-529 BC when Iran was under the emperorship of Cyrus II. The title of the book relates to one of the most unliked yet powerful dictators of that country. It is none other than Ayatollah Khomeini. This shrewd dictator came to power in 1980. In fact, he is one of the rare entities who were criminal and religious at the same time. As a matter of fact, he was a hard-core dictator, shrewd, criminal, hypocrite, liar, manipulator.

It takes a lot of research work to create a historical book like From Paris To Tehran – The Forgotten King: The Fascinating History of Iran, From the Persian Shah to Ayatollah Khomeini’s Revolution (Middle Eastern Politics & Biographies) by Ozias Marcovici. Chapter 1 begins with The Meeting of Three Titans in 1943 in Tehran. And the journey ends with Chapter 18 with the Title – The Islamic Republic of Iran. In between, you get to know the history of Pahlavi Dynasty. It is interesting to know about Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. In fact, Reza had a significant inclination towards Western countries. And he was a dictator. The book also takes up important incidents like the seizure of the American Embassy and the Nuclear Agreement. If you don’t know when and how Iran became the Islamic Republic from an Empire, then this book will tell you all in detail.

From Paris To Tehran Is A Fascinating Historical Journey

From Paris To Tehran by Ozias Marcovici is having more in store than you can expect. And that too in a very interesting manner. If you want to explore Iran, this book has a lot to deliver in that context.

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