War Correspondent and Cultural Critic

Ann Marlowe

62 articles 2007–2018

Ann Marlowe is a writer and author known for her extensive on-the-ground reporting from Afghanistan and the broader Middle East. She contributed frequently to The Weekly Standard from 2007 to 2018, covering counterinsurgency, Afghan governance, military affairs, and cultural topics. Her work also spans travel writing and cultural criticism, and she has authored several books.

Treasures of Parma

September 2, 2018 · Books & Arts, Magazine, culture

Ann Marlowe visits the Pilotta museum complex—one of Italy’s overlooked gems.

The Counterinsurgent

January 28, 2018 · CIA, Books and Art, Ann Marlowe

“You dirty son of a bitch.  .  . somebody’s got to beat you up and I hereby appoint myself.” Thus Edward Lansdale recalled addressing the CIA station chief in Saigon in the mid-1950s, when Lansdale was a CIA operative under cover of assistant air attaché at the American embassy. Whether or not his…

Terror and Slow Justice: Dragging Libya to Court for a Deadly 1989 Hijacking

September 7, 2017 · magazine_repost, Books and Art, Ann Marlowe

Few Americans noticed, but this past June, Muammar Qaddafi’s longtime spy chief Abdullah Senussi was apparently released from prison in Tripoli, where he had been sentenced to death in July 2015 for decades of officially sanctioned murders of his fellow Libyans. If Senussi was not…

Terror and Slow Justice: Dragging Libya to Court for a Deadly 1989 Hijacking

September 1, 2017 · Books and Art, Ann Marlowe, Libya

Few Americans noticed, but this past June, Muammar Qaddafi’s longtime spy chief Abdullah Senussi was apparently released from prison in Tripoli, where he had been sentenced to death in July 2015 for decades of officially sanctioned murders of his fellow Libyans. If Senussi was not…

Slough Saga

May 5, 2017 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

It makes sense that Mick Herron’s third novel about MI5 can be enjoyed without reading the others: Coming in at the middle of things is integral to his books. It's the condition of life, especially in a government bureaucracy. And the same could be said about intelligence gathering: It's what we…

Jane for Moderns

February 3, 2017 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

Eligible is one of more than a hundred reworkings of Pride and Prejudice listed on Goodreads and it’s part of a recent publishing enterprise, The Austen Project, which has paired six Austen novels with six contemporary novelists. (None of the four released so far has been a critical success.) When…

Popular Science

October 28, 2016 · Books, Ann Marlowe, Magazine

What if a computer program revealed what people want to read, even down to the punctuation? It could tell the likelihood of any given book becoming a bestseller. It could tell whether a given book had been written by a man or a woman. It could even tell who wrote it, as long as there was a large…

Winner Take All

March 18, 2016 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

If you’ve ever wanted to know why Albuquerque topless pole dancers get significantly higher tips on days when they are more fertile—and who doesn't?—this book is for you. Like many other aspects of human behavior, it has to do with the fact that men and women both try to maximize the success of…

Why Read Trollope?

October 26, 2015 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) may be the best-kept literary secret in English—a secret hiding in plain sight. His collected works take up a long bookshelf: 47 novels and 18 works of nonfiction. Once, most educated English and American households owned some of those volumes; today, there are still…

An Afghan Tale

July 6, 2015 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

The Valley is marketed as a police procedural set in a remote American military outpost in Afghanistan, and it is a page-turner, all 448 of them. It’s also so cunningly constructed that I had to read it twice to be sure I understood everything that was going on—and there are still a few loose ends.…

King John’s Verdict

May 18, 2015 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

In Ivanhoe, Prince John is thoroughly repugnant, displaying “a dissolute audacity, mingled with extreme haughtiness and indifference to the feelings of others,” as well as a “libertine disposition.” According to Stephen Church, Walter Scott’s character is “almost wholly a later concoction”—except,…

Libyans Plead for American Help

May 11, 2015 · Ann Marlowe, Libya, Muammar Qaddafi

‘Why does the United States fight terror in Syria, Iraq, and Africa but not in Libya?” Idris al Magreibi, 40, a tall, lightly bearded member of Libya’s House of Representatives in Tobruk, was pacing the floor in the offices of the Libyan Mission to the United Nations as he raised the question. He…

A Baghdad Quartet

February 9, 2015 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

When I finished The Kills, it was not with the sense of the world made right, or understood rightly, that the traditional novel aspires to, nor with the contemporary recognition that the author and I—ironists both!—share a cynical disillusionment. It was with a profound sense of loss, even anger,…

Brain Drain

June 2, 2014 · Ann Marlowe, book reviews, Magazine

I'm poor in everything but ironies, and to be truthful, I’ve forgotten what’s so good about irony in the first place. It’s just the resting state of the universe. .  .  . Irony is not order, but it gives a shape to things.

House of Hope

November 11, 2013 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

It’s become nearly dogmatic in academic history that the writer ought to focus as much as he can on the disenfranchised, the “marginalized,” to avoid “privileging” the viewpoints of the upper classes, of men, and of white people. And so anxious are the historians not to perpetuate injustice that…

Future Imperfect

January 21, 2013 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Writing at age 35, on the cusp between youth and the rest of life, I wanted to know what to do about being a rock critic when I was no longer young. (Easy—quit.) Now, 20 years later, and on the verge of leaving middle age, I look to science fiction to help me master the imaginable sting of death:…

Sexual Overload

May 28, 2012 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Sex addiction may not exactly be an existential threat to the United States, but as this book makes clear, the cultural trend which created this farcical “illness” has much graver consequences. The medicalizing of what was hitherto seen as a moral issue and the promotion of a ridiculously broad…

City Confidential

March 5, 2012 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

And under the influence of the cradlelike rocking of the train, your carefully crafted persona begins to slip away. The superego dissolves as your mind begins to wander aimlessly over your cares and your dreams; or better yet, it drifts into an ambient hypnosis, where even cares and dreams recede…

Hello, Libya

January 30, 2012 · Ann Marlowe, Libya, Qaddafi

Tripoli

After Jihad

September 19, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Libya, Afghanistan

Sabratha, Libya—“Girls were going to school under the Taliban! I know, because I was living in Kabul in 1999.” Youssef, 45, is as insistent on this untruth as this cheerful, equable man gets. A barrel-chested Libyan who spent ten years in Afghanistan under unclear circumstances, followed by eleven…

The War for Libya’s West Coast

September 2, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Rebels, Revolution

Libya—Here, west of Tripoli, the revolutionaries are fighting largely without direction from Benghazi's Transitional National Council. I’m traveling with three Sabratha fighters—Rowad, his brother Ahmed, and their cousin Mansur. The goal is to get to the frontline at Adjilat, where they plan to…

How Qaddafi's Forces Left Sabratha

August 26, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Blog

Sabratha, Libya—I went to the Roman ruins here on Sunday, and they seem to be fine. But it’s true that Qaddafi’s forces were based here when they attempted to defend Sabratha on the 14th of August. And they left behind mattresses, parts of their uniforms, and lots of trash.

The Fight for Zwara—and Liberty

August 25, 2011 · Rebels, Ann Marlowe, Revolution

Zwara, Libya—We’ve arrived in Zwara, which is about 70 miles from Tripoli and 35 miles from the Tunisian border. It’s impossible to get out in any direction, though one could get out to sea, if one fancied a long boat trip.

Qaddafi Loyalists Take Stand in Zwara

August 24, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Rebels, tripoli

Zwara, Libya—The coastal city of Zwara, near the Libya-Tunisia border, is under siege by pro-Qaddafi forces who continue to shell the city and appear to be the last of Qaddafi’s forces still fighting in Libya.

10 Rebels Killed in Libya by Errant NATO Missile

August 18, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Rebels, Libya

Jadu, Libya—Yesterday, around 4 p.m., 10 Jadu fighters, who were attempting to cut off the retreat of a column of Qaddafi militiamen, were killed by an errant NATO missile strike near Badr, Libya. Two other fighters are missing. The loss of ten, who included two commanders, is an unimaginable…

The Fight for Sabratha

August 16, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Rebels, Libya

Western Libya—Only about thirty volunteers of the three hundred strong Martyr Wasam Qaliyah Brigade are gathered around former Libyan army general Senussi Mohamed as he outlines the plan for the liberation of the coastal city of Sabratha, about 90 kilometers north from Qaddafi’s forces. Crouched in…

A Night at the Gravel Pit (Updated)

August 4, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Rebels, Libya

Djerba, Libya—As Saturday night wears on, the young men talk more and more confidently about an offensive they anticipate the next day, the big move 100 km north that will allow them to liberate their city of Sabratha. The mood is exultant, with some speculation that we will move forward at…

Bohemian Rhapsody

April 18, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Art and Madness A Memoir of Lust Without Reason by Anne Roiphe Nan A. Talese, 240 pp., $24.95

Supply-Side Foreign Policy

February 7, 2011 · Ann Marlowe, Afghanistan, Blog

Here’s an idea: Let’s try reducing the supply of insurgency in Afghanistan rather than reducing the demand for it. This notion—potentially as important an insight as the Laffer curve—comes from a 41-year-old book by a retired RAND Corporation scholar now entering his ninth decade, Charles Wolf Jr.

Cool Gone Cold

November 9, 2009 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Birth (and Death) of the Cool

Forgotten Founder

October 19, 2009 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Who was David Galula?

Arms and the Men

June 29, 2009 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Enemy at the Gate

History in Stone

March 23, 2009 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

I turned carefully to scan the horizon. Nearby, French archeologists had recently uncovered 40 stupas and three Buddhist monasteries, but I couldn't see them. With just a foot of crumbling mud brick separating me from a 60-foot fall, I didn't push my luck.

Tillion's Cousins

June 30, 2008 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 1966 Germaine Tillion, a 59-year-old French structural anthropologist, published a slim volume entitled Le harem et les cousins (English title: The Republic of Cousins). This book, and Tillion herself, are largely unknown in the United States outside academic circles. Yet 40 years after its…

A Counterinsurgency Grows in Khost

May 19, 2008 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine

While news reports like to speak of a "resurgent Taliban" in Afghanistan, in the 14 provinces that make up Regional Command East in Afghanistan they are a defeated military force. Not only do the Taliban refuse to engage American forces directly, they have not won an engagement with the Afghan…

Ferrara for Me

March 31, 2008 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

After three decades of visits to Italy, I stumbled upon the perfect small Italian city. It's a wonderfully livable haven which offers the best case for the Italian way of life, as lived in exquisite surroundings--not uncommon in Italy--but with a rare civility and sense of the common good.

Lost Kingdom

December 3, 2007 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Land of the High Flags

Anthropology Goes to War

November 26, 2007 · Ann Marlowe, Features, Magazine

At this point in the war on terror, even people who think David Galula is a trendy new chef are quick to point to the need for cultural understanding in successful counterinsurgency. Often, they are quicker still to beat up on our military for supposedly ignoring this. They are quite sure that if…

Goodbye, Dubai

October 15, 2007 · Ann Marlowe, Magazine, Books and Arts

Last February I woke up one morning in New Jersey and realized I couldn't take one more winter there. I had to move to a warm climate. I was thinking Scottsdale, but then the chance to work in my family's business in Dubai came up.