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558 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 11, 2014
The image is a portrait of Alexis de Toqueville of Democracy in America fame. De Toqueville is also famous for the way he summed up Muhammad, Islam, and the Koran, which are the subjects of my books:
“I studied the Koran a great deal. I came away from that study with the conviction that by and large there have been few religions in the world as deadly to men as that of Muhammad. As far as I can see, it is the principal cause of the decadence so visible today in the Muslim world, and, though less absurd than the polytheism of old, its social and political tendencies are in my opinion infinitely more to be feared . . ."
A man after my own heart, plus he looks like Al Pacino as Michael Corleone in the first Godfather film, also a man after my own heart--Al Pacino I mean.
In order to write It's All About Muhammad I had to read a lot more than the Koran. In all, I soldiered through 20,000 pages of the original source material. I also read numerous secondary works by Western scholars and others. (I now have a physical library of nearly 500 books related to this subject!) From this study I extracted the real story about Muhammad, and it is presented in this book in a way that has never been done before.
For one, though it is a biography the book reads like a true crime story, for in fact Muhammad committed just about every crime listed by the International Criminal Court as constituting a crime against humanity--all provable from Muslim literature. I included 47 pages of double-column chapter notes citing--and often heavily quoting--the original sources. This is to show that nothing in the book is invented
Additionally, the book is illustrated, with 25 black and white illustrations, half of them "depicting" atrocities Muhammad committed.
This is a default book. Following 9/11, year after year went by and no one wrote it even though it was clear it needed to be done. Muslims follow in the footsteps of Muhammad. Islam--what he created--is now a global threat. Everyone is threatened by it. But nobody wrote it so finally I had to do it. My biography is a simple statement of a fact. F. W. Burleigh: a man who saw a book that needed to be written and wrote it.
Now I'm offering a second book which also gives a critical look at Islam, both of Sunni and Shia varieties. Belief in Muhammad as God's "messenger" is the foundation for both, with similar results despite differences in their theologies. The Imam of Time, however, is a novel, and in Part 1, the reader gets the experience of being with Muhammad through the experience of the hero, Ahmed, an Iranian appalled by all the injustices he sees around him under the Iranian theocracy. He wishes he could know the true Islam of Muhammad. He gets his wish and finds himself in 7th century Arabia where he ends up as Muhammad's scribe, giving him an up close look at the founder of Islam. It soon becomes clear to him where the injustices of mullahs come from. His return to contemporary Iran in a manner that shows he's the Mahdi--the long-awaited Imam of time, offers a look at the Islamic system of Iran. Because of his experiences with Muhammad, the hero has something new and fresh and true to say to his contemporaries, and it is something Iran's rulers do not want to hear--or allow to be heard.