'This remarkable upside-down tale A personal story, not a polemic provocative His personal odyssey confers on Shlaim an exceptional authority for his words; he can say things that others of us cannot his thesis deserves to be considered with respect.' Max Hastings, The Sunday Times
'At the heart of this riveting and profoundly controversial book is Shlaims investigation into the Baghdad bombings against Jewish targets in 1950 and 1951 This is a beautifully written book which artfully blends the personal with the political. The recollections of family life in both its glory and its anguished tribulations are vividly recreated. Shlaims is a powerful and humane voice which reminds us that the Palestinians were not the only victims of the creation of Israel in 1948.' Spectator
'Three Worlds, by the Oxford historian of the modern Middle East Avi Shlaim, is an often enchanting memoir of his childhood in Baghdad... A gripping account... A lost world in Iraq, which is brilliantly brought back to life in this fascinating memoir.' David Abulafia, Financial Times
'[An] absorbing, contentious memoir Even if it cannot be rebuilt, Three Worlds, quite marvellously, brings [the old world of Iraq] back to life.' TLS
'An intimate and engaging life story that forces the reader to re-examine three very different worlds Iraq, Israel and Britain in the middle decades of the twentieth century. A reflective and insightful plunge into the identity politics of the Arab-Jew by one of Britains greatest public intellectuals. But also the best book Ive read all year.' Eugene Rogan, author of The Arabs
'This memoir is an engrossing personal narrative as well as a historians penetrating reflection on the misfortune of the "other victims" of Zionism: Jews exiled from their old Arab homelands where they were well integrated, and transplanted to Israel, to serve as a subaltern class of the Hebrew settler nation.' Moshe Machover
'Three Worlds juxtaposes a fascinating family story, unfolding across Iraq, Israel, and the UK, with an intriguing historical account of Iraqi Jews during an especially calamitous period. Here the preeminent scholar of the ArabIsraeli conflict furnishes a precious personal glimpse into a past in which Arab-Jews figure prominently, generating a more subtle and multilayered picture of the partition of Palestine and its aftermath.' Ella Shohat, author of On the Arab-Jew
'[Shlaims]mizrahiroots and experience produce a raw nerve, the emotional and psychological wellspring of his later oeuvre and politics His personal story is moving, and it is told with atypical, engrossing candor Three Worldsis very readable, like everything that Shlaim writes.' Benny Morris, Tablet
'In thisdetailed, resonant account, historian Shlaim recalls the complexities of growing up as an Arab Jew in Iraq and Israel Those interested in alternative Jewish attitudes toward Zionism will find thisilluminating.' Publishers Weekly
'Sharply observed, and without stridency, in making a case for an ecumenical Israel.' Kirkus
Brave Well written and informative, this is a fascinating glimpse into a forgotten world. Tablet
'Vivid This luminous memoir offers readers a chance to reimagine life not ruled by force, fear, deceit and exclusion.' Middle East Eye
'Avi Shlaims intriguing, ideologically-driven book,Three Worlds, is a bitter-sweet autobiography of an accomplished Iraqi Jew who left his homeland under duress, an impassioned look back at Iraqs lost Jewish community, and a stinging critique of Zionism and Israel.' Times of Israel