The Great Siege of Malta
- Published: 30 January 2025
- ISBN: 9780141997766
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 352
Marcus Bull’s revisiting of the siege through the eyes of the Ottomans and a global lens that shifts our angle of vision has made a considerable contribution to our understanding of the events of 1565... his approach is investigatory, based on a forensic study of all the available evidence and posing open-ended questions... the coverage of the siege itself is succinct and full of interesting perspectives
Roger Crowley, Engelsberg Ideas
This is an enjoyable book, written by a skilled historian who has read very widely… Everyone will learn something from reading Bull’s work
Noel Malcolm, Telegraph
Thorough and propulsive
Michael Prodger, New Statesman
‘Impressive, deeply researched… Rather than pursue old religious agendas and messianic readings of the triumph Bull places the siege in a broad global economic and political context
Andrew Lambert, Naval Review
A vivid account of a close-run thing … peculiarly fascinating
David Horspool, The Oldie
Thoughtful and incisive… a great strength of Bull’s book is precisely that he often dissents from received opinion… he has provided an impressive reassessment, rich in penetrating insights, of a major moment in the history of the Mediterranean
David Abulafia, TLS
An epic account… [a] no-nonsense, myth-busting book… [Bull] writes with knightly brio and packs a great deal of local and global history into his authoritative book
Pratinav Anil, The Times
An engrossing new study… Bull’s account of the siege itself is lucid and dispassionate. He has a sharp eye for bombast – representing the failed defence of St Elmo as a heroic act of self-sacrifice, for example – that might obscure uncomfortable truths… Bull has set himself a challenging task: to convey the drama of the siege and the myths that grew out of it while downplaying, if not denying, suggestions of its wider historical importance. It’s a difficult balancing act, but one he pulls off with aplomb
Mathew Lyons, Literary Review