While this book is on an obscure and perhaps specialized subject, it is interesting and well-written. The degree of research and scholarship is enormous, yet it remains accessible to the lay reader who it interested and willing to put in a little effort.
According the blurb on the cover, the author is "Reader in Mesopotamian Studies at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of the British Academy." The focus of the book is Mesopotamia from 3000-1500 BCE. After the latter date (the era of the Kassite hegemony, a foreign people probably from the Zagros Mountains to the Northeast), the author states, Mesopotamian society changed so much, despite retaining language, script and literary traditions that the history becomes something of a different order, its relationship rather like that of the Byzantine Empire with 5th century BCE Athens. His interest is, as the title states, economics, though he does not ignore the rich literary texts. Most of these, though, come from the period after which he wishes to write about.