Tim Marshall is a leading authority on foreign affairs with more than thirty years of reporting experience. He was diplomatic editor at Sky News and before that worked for the BBC and LBC/IRN radio. He has reported from forty countries and covered conflicts in Croatia, Bosnia, Macedonia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Israel. He is the author of Prisoners of Geography, The Age of Walls, A Flag Worth Dying For, The Power of Geography, and The Future of Geography.
‘Very accessible and allows the author to lead the reader on a
voyage of galactic discovery’ Robert Verkaik, The Mail on
Sunday
‘[An] engaging exploration of power politics in space’ Irish
Independent
‘A superb survey of planetary politics’ Bryan Appleyard, The Sunday
Times
‘[Tim’s] prose is brisk in pace and refreshingly crystalline in its
clarity, affording a highly readable lesson in historical
geopolitics… deeply thought-provoking’ BBC Sky at Night
‘Marshall is an engaging writer, good at explaining the science as
well as the politics, and with an eye for a telling fact’ Lawrence
Freedman, The New Statesman
‘A fascinating and crucial insight into how, even as humanity moves
upwards into the final frontier, we’ll be influenced by the
geographies of space. Marshall has done it again!’ Professor Lewis
Dartnell, author of Being Human
‘Astropolitics is a word I never thought would enter my lexicon –
but after reading this fascinating book, I’m hooked!’ Dr Becky
Smethurst, astrophysicist and author of A Brief History of Black
Holes
‘Tim Marshall captures the excitement, anxiety and strangeness of
being at the beginning of a period of major geopolitical change. A
fascinating book.’ Helen Gordon, author of Notes from Deep Time
‘If space is our future, this urgent book reveals that we’re in
danger of handing it over to warmongers, plutocrats and
conquistadors as rapacious as those on Earth. Tim Marshall shows us
why we need to look up – fast.’ Tom Burgis, author of Kleptopia
‘A chilling, insightful exploration of the political and military
implications of our presence in space.’ Brian Clegg, author of
Final Frontier
‘This stirring book shows why astropolitics matters for everyone on
Earth – not just the scientists and the dreamers.’ Dr Bleddyn E.
Bowen, author of Original Sin: Power, Technology and War in Outer
Space
‘In his typical style – wielding a wickedly clever pen – Marshall
provides a thoroughly enjoyable, dizzyingly thought-provoking, and
technologically plausible ride through the terrain of solar space.’
Professor Everett Dolman, author of Astropolitik: Classical
Geopolitics in the Space Age
‘The Future of Geography takes us on a gripping and amazing
journey, to guide us expertly and often amusingly into the
exploration of space and its profound implications for those of us
left behind on planet earth.’ Professor Ian Goldin, author of Terra
Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years ‘Having
conquered the world with his bestselling series on how geography
shapes international relations, Tim Marshall is reaching for the
skies. As states and companies compete aggressively for scarce
resources on Earth, the desire to control space grows ever more
powerful. The next stage of geopolitical rivalry is being shaped,
he says, by who and what will dominate the final frontier. What
could go wrong?’ Jason Cowley, The Sunday Times, Best Thought and
Ideas Books of 2023 ‘In his latest analysis of international
relations, our geopolitical columnist Tim Marshall turns
his attention to the skies and the geopolitics of outer space, or
‘astropolitics’. We’re headed back to the Moon and this time we’re
there to stay. Will it be a mission for the benefit of all
humanity? Unlikely, says Marshall in his new book, The Future
of Geography – at least, not unless we see a lot of changes,
and we’re running out of time to make them.’ Geographical, The best
books of 2023
‘Marshall makes a complex topic accessible, as he combines vivid
storytelling with sharp geopolitical insights, and blends the past
and the future’ Space Signals
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