Ah, yes, the French and Indian War. One of the least understood and ignored conflicts of history. The British and French rivalry brought to America. No surprise putting these two on the same continent with no channel between them erupted in arguably the first world war. I could not find a single book on this war in a local major bookstore and do not remember where I got this copy. Anyway, supposedly, George Washington (yes, that George Washington) started the war in 1754 by attacking a French encampment on his way to the Ohio River. Whether this was justified is debatable, but it had momentous consequences. It laid bare the fractious relations between Britain’s American colonies and the homeland. Britain always looked down on the colonists who took advantage of Britain’s protection to spread west of the Alleghenies in search of fortune. They bumped into the French doing the same thing from the north and west. The Indians were caught in the middle and paid the ultimate price. While the most important fighting was in North America, there were other significant battles around the world in places like India, the Caribbean, Europe and even Africa and Asia.
This book explains it all clearly and succinctly. While the prose is very good, the maps are useless. It would have been better to use present-day maps rather than those that were used in the eighteenth century. It shows the strategies of Britain, France, Spain, etc. and how there were many interests at play: military, mercantile, colonization and greed and carelessness. The book is a good introduction to the subject.