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  • The ISIS Apocalypse

  • The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State
  • By: William McCants
  • Narrated by: Stephen McLaughlin
  • Length: 6 hrs and 44 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (324 ratings)

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The ISIS Apocalypse

By: William McCants
Narrated by: Stephen McLaughlin
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Publisher's summary

The Islamic State is one of the most lethal and successful jihadist groups in modern history, surpassing even al-Qaeda. Thousands of its followers have marched across Syria and Iraq, subjugating millions, enslaving women, beheading captives, and daring anyone to stop them. Thousands more have spread terror beyond the Middle East under the Islamic State's black flag. How did the Islamic State attract so many followers and conquer so much land? By being more ruthless, more apocalyptic, and more devoted to state building than its competitors.

The shrewd leaders of the Islamic State combined two of the most powerful yet contradictory ideas in Islam - the return of the Islamic Empire and the end of the world - into a mission and a message that shapes its strategy and inspires its army of zealous fighters. They have defied conventional thinking about how to wage wars and win recruits. Even if the Islamic State is defeated, jihadist terrorism will never be the same. Based almost entirely on primary sources in Arabic - including ancient religious texts and secret al-Qaeda and Islamic State letters that few have seen - William McCants' The ISIS Apocalypse explores how religious fervor, strategic calculation, and doomsday prophecy shaped the Islamic State's past and foreshadow its dark future.

©2015 William McCants (P)2015 Macmillan Audio
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: History
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What listeners say about The ISIS Apocalypse

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Concise Overview of an Important Topic

What did you love best about The ISIS Apocalypse?

It did a good job of going over the key points, events, terms, and individuals involved in this topic while not dragging on.

Who was your favorite character and why?

There were so many names in this book that a repeat listen or reading of the physical copy would help cement the information within the book. I found myself looking up the individuals as they were presented and making notes as the novel progressed which helped a lot.

Did the narration match the pace of the story?

Yes. This is a factual book and is written almost like a textbook. The narration is devoid of emotion so it is just you and the facts. With that said, it can be dry and difficult to continue on at times.

Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

It is some scary stuff with no real answer in sight. It was an eye opening experience and has encouraged me to read more on the topic.

Any additional comments?

If you are looking for a neat, detailed, and to the point book about ISIS this meets the bill. I never found it to drag on at any point and am eager to learn more about the topic. This could be titled "ISIS 101".

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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Welcome to the cold deep end of the pool

This is not a good easy listen. It starts out boringly, gets a bit better but never rises to anything approaching literature. However, as one who extensively studied Islam I recommend this work as the best cold splash of reality you can find in one place and in such short order.

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3 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Good book on the history of ISIS

Good book on the history of ISIS, but where it lacks is looking forward once ISIS is defeated.

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I get it now

Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

Absolutely. Should be required reading for every American. A concise but detailed 101 study of ISIS from which you can gain the baseline to know what is really going on with this terrorist group.

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Clear on ideologies, history, situation, outlook

The whole story of course cannot be contained in this format and size book. It sprawls into other regions and times and sub-plots twisting back into history. But points go to this author, for a sharp job of picking up all sorts of threads and tying them together in this relatively short book. There are other pieces of the story readily available in audios already released. I found, as a good prelude to this one, The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright, which follows the earlier jihadist history back to its "Johnny Appleseed" if you will, Qutb in the 1940s. This book picks up the Al Qaeda story and updates it, as ISIS and Al Qaeda's histories are intertwined and linked. But imagine ISIS, a group so ghastly and beyond the pale in recent history, Al Qaeda has been telling it to tone it down!
Any viral phenomenon, I suppose, if it will survive, likely loses some of its more edgy and fatal virulence as it matures and becomes hospitable to wider environs. Hence the transition from conquest to administration. Once-radical groups can theoretically become more settled, and have done so historically, though the author here is careful not to throw simplistic predictions around, or hide the messy complexities everyone faces who is touched or menaced by this. ISIS exists in history like anybody else, but is its own creature.
As for the ideologies, we get to see a swath of "Islamic" "prophecies" (countless people in all sorts of sects, dynasties and groups have been putting words into the mouth of the Prophet since the moment he died, to suit their own narratives, to the point anyone can cherry-pick virtually any narrative out of the morass of them, to condone pretty much anything). The Koran itself has certain dualities about peace and war, accord and violence, and the scholarship on the original Koran has been careful (compare its untouched word-for-word classical Arabic to countless iterations of the Jewish/Christian Bible from anybody who cares to venture a translation, with a huge divergence in key words and concepts), but Koran's overlay of hadith, etc., grafted on from all corners is like a deluge. Its a noisy mess of stuff. I guess it is no news that self-titled fundamentalists like anyone else can't resist tacking on their version to the supposedly perfect untouchable word of God. We see how situationally useful "prophecies" have been picked up by the ilk of ISIS (headed by a guy with a PhD in Koranic studies), the no-longer useful ones discarded as situations fail to cooperate, and the whole mess repackaged and retro-fitted continuously and marketed to ignorant (not-so-scholarly) young men at loose ends, the better to harness their raw youth energies and fit them with suicide vests, etc. All this helps us to focus intelligently and more calmly on the marginal members of our domestic and global societies who are out there in large numbers and fodder for cults like this, especially in the aftermath of the Cold War, and in the noisy superficiality of the Internet. The 20th century Cold War and narrowcast media (as I see it) imposed a larger polarized two-team (militarized, but more orderly, in ways) narrative onto things, to absorb the energies and attentions of such populations. Now anybody anywhere can get entrepreneurial with this kind of stuff, as they can with music, humor, etc. And new networks create overnight winners and losers in any kind of field. This briefing (which does not go afield into this sociological stuff I am overlaying here) helps create a context for understanding this particular aspect of our times. This author is, here, more specifically a middle east scholar.
At the end, the author reviews the problems now, in the overall region and situation, and reviews the current US policies in response. The current policies make considerable sense, given the messy tradeoffs and factors we face now (without going into a blame game about what this and that US leader did wrong in the past -- a topic this book does not address itself centrally to. That is a big chunk of the story from the US side, not to be ignored, but it is not the topic here). Of course, the situation is live and unfolding as we speak, and the responses will adjust accordingly. This is a great briefing.

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Great Read!

An amazing read, but TERRIBLE narration (which unfortunately almost kept me from finishing the book).

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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choose a new reader

The content of this book was very good but it was nearly unbearable to listen to. If I could get a refund, I would.

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informative read

very informative book. Well written, organized and an easy read. thoroughly enjoyed it. Highly recommended

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Great book. Bad reader.

Stephen McLaughlin need to learn how to pronounce Arabic words if he's reading a book like this. His pronunciation is so off that it deters the listener from comprehending his reading.

The book, is excellent and I would recommend it to anyone studying international terrorism and militant Islam.

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Excellent text, annoying narrator

The text itself is fantastic--well-researched, scholarly, and high quality. The narrator's speech patterns are exceptionally irritating, however. The sharp exhale on every letter "p", the smacking of the tongue against the roof of the mouth on the letters “d” and “t”, the occasionally inconsistent pronunciation of Arabic names, the nasalized overtone, and the British accenting of select vowels from an American reader, are all extremely distracting.

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