Alan Dershowitz, the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, is one of the country's foremostappellate lawyers and a distinguished defender of individual liberties. He appears frequently on television and has contributed articles to the New York Times and other newspapers and magazines. His many books include the New York Times bestsellers The Case for Israel and Chutzpah as well as Blasphemy, The Case for Peace, Preemption, Finding Jefferson, and Is There a Right to Remain Silent?: Coercive Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment after 9/11.
"The explicit intent of this confrontational book is to intellectually engage prominent ""enemies of Israel"" in ""the open marketplace of ideas."" Harvard law professor Dershowitz ( The Case for Israel ) begins with a vehement denunciation of his onetime friend Jimmy Carter, and he concludes with an appendix that systematically refutes many claims advanced in Carter's book Palestine Peace Not Apartheid . Though the former president receives Dershowitz's most thorough criticism, the author also identifies and scrutinizes many other ""enemies,"" from Noam Chomsky and Patrick Buchanan to Hezbollah and the Iranian government. Dershowitz assumes the posture of a litigator, but his deep convictions and previous history with many of the book's subjects lend a more personal tone to his critiques, as Dershowitz himself admits. Chapters on terrorism and Iran, which are less targeted at specific individuals, take a more effective philosophical and historical approach. Despite its stated goal of eliciting further debate on the Israel-Palestine conflict, this provocative book will likely appeal to sympathizers and alienate readers less disposed to its author's positions. (Oct.) ( Publishers Weekly , August 25, 2008)"