Justin Marozzi is contributing editor of the Spectator. He used to sell tobacco to Libya and was the Financial Times's correspondent in the Philippines for two years. He writes regularly for the Financial Times and has also written for The Times and The Economist and broadcast for the BBC World Service and Radio Four. He is the author of South from Barbary, an account of a journey along the old slave routes of the Libyan Sahara.
'Using many contemporary sources, Marozzi creates a convincing portrait of a complex man...An engaging mixture of history, travelogue and contemporary reportage. Well written and skilfully put together.' Jonathan Sumption, Sunday Telegraph, Books of the Year 'He has brought the mighty warrior in from the cold and allowed him to stalk these pages with bloody magnificence.' Sunday Times 'Walking...about the dazzling buildings that are Tamur's legacy, [Marozzi] brilliantly conveys how everything goes in cycles, both in nature and in human affairs.' Daily Telegraph 'Excellent...Provides a superbly rounded and vivid portrait of one of history's most fascinating personalities.' Evening Standard 'As well researched in libraries as with boots on the ground in some of the world's more impenetrable places, this is a fine study of a neglected but linchpin historical figure.' Daily Mail 'Robust, enthusiastic and richly detailed...full of fascinating, if often gruesome, anecdotes.' Literary Review