Wounded Tigris A river journey through the cradle of civilization

Leon McCarron

Book - 2023

For thousands of years, the Tigris has acted as a lung exhaling life into Mesopotamia. Its cycles of flooding created seasons of plenty and seasons of scarcity. Water was once everywhere, from the northern mountains to the southern marshlands. But it is now beginning to falter, becoming clogged and erratic, and the changing climate is bringing environmental instability to the countries that rely on it. During the pandemic, in 2020, Leon McCarron travelled from the source of this great river in the Turkish highlands, through northern Syria, into the heart of Iraq, and all the way to the Persian Gulf, moving downstream through the Cradle of Civilisation. Passing through settlements of the old world - some of which are now industrial hubs - Mc...Carron talks to the inhabitants of cities like Diyarbakir, Mosul, Baghdad, Samarra and Basra, and asks them what it is like to live there now. Today almost 30 million people live in the watershed of the Tigris, but the river faces existential threats on multiple fronts. In Wounded Tigris, McCarron takes the reader on a fascinating journey from source to mouth, whilst also telling the incredible history of the varied lands the Tigris runs through, via encounters with the fascinating people whose own survival is often entwined with that of the river. Accompanied by beautiful photography, it is an unforgettable story told by a master explorer.

Saved in:

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

915.674/McCarron
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 915.674/McCarron (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Published
New York : Pegasus Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Leon McCarron (author)
Edition
First Pegasus Books cloth edition
Physical Description
340 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates ; color illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781639365074
  • Prologue: Twin rivers
  • Part one: Upper Tigris. Divine roads of the Earth
  • You should've seen it
  • Holy water
  • Newroz
  • The business of Keleks
  • The water brought them, and sent them away
  • Runaway monk
  • Land of acronyms
  • Fragile existence
  • The waterkeeper
  • Tsunami
  • The boundary
  • Part two: Middle Tigris. Hanging gardens of Nineveh
  • They came by the bridges
  • The river sheikh
  • Warning shot
  • The Great Zab
  • To be a hero
  • Honeymooners
  • Grandmother's wrinkles
  • Submerged
  • People's palaces
  • Malwiya
  • Part three: Lower Tigris. A model of city planning
  • Bridge to bridge
  • Wireat
  • Future youth
  • Electro-fishing
  • Baptism
  • The Marsh Arabs
  • Uncertainty
  • The final confluence
  • Water martyrs
  • To the sea.
Review by Booklist Review

A writer and explorer from Northern Ireland, Leon McCarron journeyed from the source of the Tigris River to its mouth at the Persian Gulf, and this is his travelogue. With a team of local fixers, activists, a British photojournalist, and a Swiss filmmaker, McCarron explored the historical lifeblood of ancient Mesopotamia and modern Turkey, Syria, and Iraq. Traveling over 1,000 miles of river in 71 days, McCarron and his colleagues witnessed extensive environmental damage, ongoing violence and militarization, and the impact of climate change. McCarron writes with empathy about the people his group met along the way, capturing the joys and traditions that endure despite upheaval. Their arduous journey was often interrupted by military checkpoints and other barriers, though they were greeted with hospitality wherever they stopped. In Iraq, the lives lost to ISIS were ever present, as were scars from the last several decades of war. Wounded Tigris is an affecting look at communities that deserve attention and aid in the face of environmental catastrophe.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An Iraq-based Northern Irish journalist ventures down the Tigris River through the fraught landscape of Turkey, Kurdistan, Syria, and Iraq. McCarron and his crew, which included British photojournalist Garthwaite, a Swiss filmmaker, a local river expert, and a Kurdish fixer/interpreter, among others, followed the ancient, beleaguered Tigris from the Kurdish highlands to the Iraqi marshes where it merges with its twin Euphrates, before emptying into the Persian Gulf. From the river's source in Birkleyn, Turkey, the team ventured 70 days by car, raft, or rickety boat, observing the imposing landscape, exploring ancient historical records and religious lore, and engaging with the curious, mostly hospitable locals along the way. For centuries, the mighty, iconic river was the source of bountiful fish and the key to trade and transportation. Because it was prone to flooding, the Tigris has, in more recent times, often been dammed, submerging significant villages, such as Saladin's ancient capital of Hasankeyf. It has also suffered from widespread pollution and, in parts, been "downgraded…from a river to a stream." During their journey, the crew navigated checkpoints ("for the next few hundred miles, everywhere we would go had been held by ISIS at some point between 2014 and 2017"); and felt the effects of the simmering unrest in Syria and the remnants of previous Iraqi conflicts, especially when passing through Saddam Hussein's birthplace of Tikrit. The narrative flows organically, delineating such daily hardships as negotiating with the police, as well as the evening delights of breaking bread with new friends in their homes. Garthwaite's full-color photos, included at the end of the text, are vibrant and illuminating, and McCarron thanks her in his acknowledgments for sharing her notes and reading drafts of the manuscript. The book also includes a glossary of relevant terms. A brave adventure grippingly evoked and featuring pertinent historical context. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.