Lisa McCracken Lacy is a lecturer in the British Empire and Middle East History at Texas Tech University and has served as a visiting professor in Middle East History at Baylor University. Lacy holds a BA and MA from Baylor University, Waco, Texas, and a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin, where she was a Churchill Scholar, member of the Junior Fellows and of the British Studies seminar. She is an internationally recognized Arabian horse judge and has written the Arabian horse entry in the Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa and co-written the Standard of Excellence, breed standard for the Egyptian Arabian horse.
Lacy provides an engaging portrait of Lady Anne Blunt, a late Victorian traveller and political activist. In addition to being an informative and entertaining biography of a fascinating person, this study provides significant insights into the development of British imperial policies and emerging nationalist politics in the Middle East. The accounts of the wide-ranging activities of Lady Anne Blunt as an artist and a horse breeder add interesting dimensions to the story. - John Voll, Georgetown University, Lady Anne Blunt in the Middle East provides a unique look at the world shared by my great-great grandfather, Ali Pasha Cherif [Sherif] and Lady Anne Blunt. It is a fascinating look at the relationship between the politics of Egyptian self-determination and culture connected through horses and politics. This work not only sheds new light on the complex political and cultural relationships between Egyptian, Turkish, Ottoman and British societies of late nineteenth-century Egypt, but it also highlights the emerging internal British debate over colonialism as well. It is a must-read for those seeking a more nuanced understanding of nineteenth-century Egypt. - Gulsun Ahmed Sherif, co-founder of the Egyptian Arabian Horse Foundation and co-author of The Abbas Pasha Manuscript and Horses and Horsemen of Arabia and Egypt During the Time of Abbas Pasha, 1800-1860