Maddy-Weitzman seeks to synthesize the complex history of the contemporary Arab Middle East, focusing on Arab identity and Arab nationalism. Using mostly English-language sources, the author argues that Arab identity evolved out of ‘Arabism,’ or Arabs’ consciousness of being distinct from the Ottomans ruling them, before being articulated into a more structured vision of a fractured nation under the dominion of Western powers that needed to reassemble its fragments into an independent union. The constantly thwarted ‘dream’ of unity is seen as the bedrock of ‘Arab’ politics, the book's object. Wars with Israel loom large, as each defeat pointed to the hollowness of the assumed unity project. The emphasis on ‘Arab’ nationalism as an explanatory concept obscures the role played by imperialism (referred to neutrally as ‘domination’), either in the ‘weakness’ of Arab states the author notes, or Western powers’ apparent fear of Arab unity. The book's tone is restrained, the style is clear, and where details are given, some sections are informative.