The book is divided into six parts covering three major "waves of unity":
: Mackintosh-Smith, a British Arabist who has lived in Sana'a, Yemen for over 30 years, wrote the final sections while confined to his neighborhood during the Yemeni Civil War. Arabs: A 3,000-Year History of Peoples, Tribes ...
: Some critics noted that its heavy focus on language might occasionally oversimplify complex political or sectarian narratives, and a few found the prose overly dense or in need of more rigorous editing. Arabs: A 3000-Year History of Peoples, Tribes and Empires The book is divided into six parts covering
: Explores early tribal roots and the advent of Islam. : Reviewers from The Spectator and The Sunday
: Reviewers from The Spectator and The Sunday Times have called it "magisterial," "brilliant," and a "worthy successor" to the works of Albert Hourani.
: Unlike many historical surveys that begin with the rise of Islam in the 7th century, this book starts in 853 BCE —the first known historical mention of Arabs in an Assyrian text. This approach "de-islamizes" and "re-arabizes" the narrative, showing that the rise of Islam actually lies at the chronological midpoint of Arab history.