Skip to main content

You may be interested in where to turn for thoughtful, reliable coverage of the situation in Iran and the broader Middle East — sources that go beyond the daily news cycle and offer real context.

Below are two books and two podcasts (in addition to The Dispatch Podcast highlighted in the previous article) that you may find valuable.

The books provide essential historical background on how we arrived at this moment; the podcasts offer informed, ongoing analysis as events continue to unfold.

For Further Reading

Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry That Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle East – Kim Ghattas (2020)

Kim Ghattas is a Lebanese-born journalist who grew up in Beirut during the civil war, served as a BBC Middle East correspondent and later as the BBC’s State Department correspondent, and is currently a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

In Black Wave, named a New York Times Notable Book, she argues that the modern Middle East’s descent into sectarianism, extremism, and cultural repression traces back to the convergence of three events in 1979: the Iranian Revolution, the siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

From that point, she traces how Saudi Arabia and Iran — once allies — became rivals in a contest for religious and political supremacy that went far beyond geopolitics, distorting societies across the region for decades.

What sets the book apart is Ghattas’s narrative approach: rather than offering a dry policy history, she tells the story through the lives of individuals across seven countries and four decades — writers, journalists, and ordinary citizens whose lives were upended by forces largely beyond their control.

King of Kings: The Iranian Revolution — A Story of Hubris, Delusion, and Catastrophic Miscalculation – Scott Anderson (2025)

Scott Anderson is a veteran war correspondent who has reported from conflict zones across the globe — including Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Chechnya, and Bosnia — and a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine.

His earlier book Lawrence in Arabia is widely regarded as one of the essential texts on the origins of the modern Middle East. King of Kings, which won the 2025 Kirkus Prize for nonfiction and was a New York Times bestseller, is a narrative history of the 1978–79 Iranian Revolution.

Anderson centers the story on the Shah of Iran, who presided over vast oil wealth and American backing yet proved fatally disconnected from his own people, and on Washington, where a massive intelligence and military presence in-country failed to see the revolution coming.

Drawing on recently discovered sources and interviews with direct participants, including the Shah’s widow, Anderson makes a compelling case that the revolution was not inevitable but was the product of cascading miscalculations. — a theme that may resonate as US policy toward Iran is once again being tested.

For Further Listening

The FRONTLINE Dispatch (PBS)

FRONTLINE has long been one of the most trusted names in investigative journalism, and its podcast arm has responded to the current crisis with characteristically thorough coverage.

A recent episode examines the roots and ramifications of the U.S.-Israeli military operation in Iran, drawing on FRONTLINE’s deep bench of reporting on the region. PBS is also airing updated versions of two companion documentaries — Remaking the Middle East: Israel vs. Iran and Strike on Iran — later this month. For those who want rigorous, nonpartisan analysis of how we arrived at this moment and what may come next, this is a good place to start.

Iran: The Latest (The Telegraph)

For those who want to follow the conflict on a daily basis, this podcast from The Telegraph is a worthy source. Hosted by veteran foreign correspondents Roland Oliphant and Venetia Rainey, it offers daily updates and in-depth interviews with military strategists, international relations scholars, and Middle East policy experts.

Because it is produced by a British outlet, the coverage tends to be less filtered through American partisan dynamics and more focused on the broader geopolitical picture — including the war’s impact on Gulf states, European energy markets, and the wider diplomatic landscape. It is particularly useful for listeners who want to stay informed without being overwhelmed by the volume of U.S. cable news coverage.