The Revolutionists
The Story of the Extremists Who Hijacked the 1970s
- Published: 2 October 2025
- ISBN: 9781529926736
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 692
The Revolutionists is an incisive account of the rise of modern terrorism following the founding of the State of Israel. It manages to be both scholarly and engaging. A wonderful book for any reader interested in the Middle East and the curse of terror that has haunted the region - and the world - for too many years
Lawrence Wright, author of The Looming Tower
A kaleidoscopic sweep through an extraordinary era told with cool authority and a novelist's eye for detail. Burke is a master in the field
Rory Carroll, author of Killing Thatcher
A captivating account of the origins of modern international terrorism with fascinating insights into the terrorists and their opponents. A must read to understand the contemporary Middle East and more
Bruce Riedel, author of Kings and Presidents: Saudi Arabia and the United States since FDR
Brilliant, beautifully researched, observed and written. An astonishing window not just into the origins of modern terrorism but also into our own age
Rory Stewart, author of Politics on the Edge
Superb. In this deeply researched and grippingly told account of the ... radicals who held a gun to the head of Western governments in the 1970s, Burke confirms his credentials as our foremost commentator on modern terrorism
Saul David, author of Sky Warriors
The Revolutionists is the authoritative true story of the encounter between leftist and Islamist radicalism, capturing in gripping and granular detail the events and ideas that elevated terrorism as a tool for political transformation. It is the culmination of years of masterful research ... The narrative is exciting, pacy and propelled forward by a cast of characters whose actions would defy all credulity if they were fictitious. By turns fascinating and heart-stopping, it is an addictive read and an extraordinary intellectual achievement
Alia Brahimi, scholar and host of Guns for Hire podcast
This is Jason Burke’s magnum opus, a hugely ambitious book that greatly benefits from his three decades of reporting on revolutionary violence. Burke seems to have read everything that is relevant about terrorism in multiple languages and talked to anybody who mattered on all sides of the conflicts he writes about. The book is propulsively written and is not only an account of the rise of leftist and Islamist terrorism in the 1960s and the decades that followed, but also a wonderfully evocative history of an era that reverberates today
Peter Bergen, author of The Rise and Fall of Osama bin Laden
Jason Burke's meticulously researched book is peopled by an array of colourful characters from terrorists to idealists and double agents. By melding eye-witness accounts with a deep understanding of politics and modern history, he shows how the hijackings and political murders of the late twentieth century led to the turbulence of the 21st. It makes for a riveting read
Lindsey Hilsum, International Editor, Channel 4 News
If journalism is the first draft of history, then this is its second draft. A book that historians will be consulting and profiting from for many decades to come
Tom Holland, author of Rubicon and host of The Rest Is History
A deeply researched, original and immersive book that shines a light on the forces of radicalism and violence that shape our modern world
Gordon Corera, former BBC security correspondent and host of The Rest Is Classified
Burke masterfully connects the dots, capturing the precise the moment the world shifted - subtly, profoundly and in ways we are only beginning to grasp. His book doesn't just illuminate the past, it brings clarity to the present
Peter Neumann, Professor of Security Studies at King's College London