Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
The Desert Crown: Ibn Saud and the Making of a Kingdom is a sweeping historical epic chronicling the life, vision, and unrelenting quest of Abdulaziz ibn Abdul Rahman Al Saud—the founder of modern Saudi Arabia. From the scorching sands of exile in Kuwait to the storming of Riyadh's Masmak Fortress, Abdulaziz emerges as a force of destiny, defying empire and tradition alike to forge a new Arab state.
This meticulously researched narrative dives into the heart of Arabia's transformation at the dawn of the twentieth century. At a time when the Ottoman Empire teetered on collapse and British ambitions loomed across the Gulf, one young man in his early twenties dared to imagine the rebirth of his ancestral kingdom. Raised in hardship, sharpened by exile, and bound to the legacy of the House of Saud, Abdulaziz rallied a loyal handful of warriors and executed one of history's boldest military reversals. Against all odds, he recaptured Riyadh, reigniting a dream long thought buried beneath tribal wars and imperial neglect.
Through riveting scenes of tribal diplomacy, secret pacts, betrayal, and battlefield strategy, The Desert Crown traces Abdulaziz's journey from fugitive prince to unchallenged monarch. Readers witness his tactical brilliance, his unwavering faith, and his complex relationship with foreign powers—particularly Britain and the declining Ottomans. Each chapter unfolds with cinematic detail, capturing not just the rise of a king but the awakening of a nation.
This book is more than biography—it is the story of a people and their desert home, a place where religion, power, and identity collide. The sands of Arabia were not merely backdrops to history; they were the crucible in which history was forged. Abdulaziz did not merely seize power; he redefined what it meant to rule in the modern Middle East.
Perfect for readers of political biography, Middle Eastern history, and lovers of epic tales of leadership and revolution, The Desert Crown offers an unforgettable portrait of one man's vision, his trials, and his triumph in carving a kingdom from the chaos.
Experience the origin of modern Saudi Arabia—as told through the courage of the man who built it.