From the best-selling author of Black Hawk Down comes a riveting,
definitive chronicle of the Iran hostage crisis, America's first battle
with militant Islam. On November 4, 1979, a group of radical Islamist
students, inspired by the revolutionary Iranian leader Ayatollah
Khomeini, stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran. They took fifty-two
Americans hostage, and kept nearly all of them hostage for 444 days. In
Guests of the Ayatollah, Mark Bowden tells this sweeping story through
the eyes of the hostages, the soldiers in a new special forces unit sent
to free them, their radical, naïve captors, and the diplomats working to
end the crisis. Bowden takes us inside the hostages' cells and inside
the Oval Office for meetings with President Carter and his exhausted
team. We travel to international capitals where shadowy figures held
clandestine negotiations, and to the deserts of Iran, where a
courageous, desperate attempt to rescue the hostages exploded into
tragic failure. Bowden dedicated five years to this research, including
numerous trips to Iran and countless interviews with those involved on
both sides. Guests of the Ayatollah is a detailed, brilliantly
re-created, and suspenseful account of a crisis that gripped and
ultimately changed the world.