Just finished reading "A History of the World in Twelve Shipwrecks" by David Gibbins, published by St.Martin's Press.
Gibbins takes the reader on a tour through the centuries, starting in the bronze age and ending up in World War 2. The concept of the book (and it's a neat one) is that ship wrecks from various periods of history are used as jumping off points to lay out the political, cultural, and especially economical networks shaping a given period. This makes a lot of sense since ships are the technology that humanity has used to engage in migration, colonization, warfare, and, most of all, trade, establishing material and cultural links among distinct populations around the globe. This expansive, globalist outlook on history makes for a much more interesting and satisfying presentation of historical events, compared to one in which authors focus on particular events in particular places (like a single person, war or revolution)
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
TEN STARS!
https://www.amazon.com/History-World-...
   
    
    
        Published on June 26, 2024 19:11