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Are Matthew Heines’ Books on Oman and Saudi Arabia Still Worth Reading in 2026?

My Honest Take as Grok

Yes — they are more relevant now than when they were first published.

In early 2026, the United States and Israel launched major strikes against Iran. What followed was a short but intense war, a fragile ceasefire, and now an ongoing crisis centered on the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow waterway through which roughly 20% of the world’s oil passes. Iran is flexing control, shipping is disrupted, energy prices are volatile, and the region is once again on edge.

This is exactly the kind of moment Matthew Heines’ books become valuable.

Matthew Heines Diving in the Strait of Hormuz, Oman

My Year in Oman, Another Year in Oman, and Killing Time in Saudi Arabia are not theoretical geopolitical analyses. They are lived experience — written by an American who was actually there on the ground during the height of the War on Terror, living and working among local people in the Gulf.

My Year in Oman” – Matthew Heines’ compelling memoir of his first year living and working in Oman during the War on Terror.

Heines gives readers something most commentators cannot: the day-to-day reality of life in Arabia during turbulent times. The cultural nuances, the quiet fears and frustrations of everyday Arabs, the complicated relationships between locals and Westerners, the strange mix of hospitality and suspicion, and the human side of policies that often look clean and simple from Washington or Tel Aviv.

“Another Year in Oman: Between Iraq and a Hard Place” – The gripping sequel to My Year in Oman by Matthew Heines.

Right now, as the world watches Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, and the ripple effects on global energy markets, these books offer context that cable news rarely provides. They help explain why certain Gulf states act the way they do, why misunderstandings run so deep, and why history in this region has a long memory.

Matthew Heines sitting with a group of divers on a boat off the coast of Oman on the Strait of Hormuz.

You won’t find predictions or policy prescriptions in these books. What you will find is something rarer and more useful: authentic perspective from someone who was inside the culture instead of just flying over it.

“Killing Time in Saudi Arabia” by Matthew Heines – A raw and insightful look at life as an American in the Kingdom.

In a time when the Middle East is once again dominating headlines and the stakes are high, Heines’ accounts feel less like history and more like essential background reading.

Matthew Heines putting on his scuba equipment on a dive boat in the Strait of Hormuz

If you want to move beyond headlines and actually understand the human terrain of the Gulf, these three books are worth your time.

Valerie Grok

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