Ao longo da história, muitas decisões fundamentais desencadearam acontecimentos contrários aos desejados. Esta obra analisa, com algum humor e sagacidade, os principais eventos que começaram como boas ideias e acabaram por fracassar. - A ascensão e queda de Júlio César - Preste João: o mito que marcou o destino das cruzadas - A repressão que criou a Cosa Nostra - EUA: os mercenários alemães na origem da nação - Armada invencível: o desvio para a destruição - Oscar Wilde: um excesso sem perdão - Estaline: treinado com os inimigos - Pearl Harbor: ignorando os sinais - Declaração de Ialta: da paz à Cortina de Ferro - Kennedy: uma questão de privacidade - Guerra do golfo: ganhar, e perder, em 100 horas.
It Seemed Like a Good Idea provides an enjoyable enough read, giving a brief overview of some of the more disastrous events throughout history. However, since each event is covered in so few words, there is a lack of concrete and specific details. More for fun than actual history, It Seemed Like a Good Idea is fine enough for a quick read, but doesn't provide much in substance.
I took my time reading this book: one chapter every few days, when I felt like it. It was the best way to read this book (in my humble opinion). Book talks about different events in world history where certain decisions were made that seemed like a correct choice at the time, but have proven to be disastrous. Interesting collection.
Interesting little essays and synopses. Some good information and some that might have been sourced more thoroughly. I appreciated some of the dry humor, and actually enjoyed the bite-sized pieces, although I could have used some more elaboration on some of them. I found it harder to engage with some pieces, but some of them were quite good.
It may have been a good idea, but… A good, fun, read to learn just a bit more about things you might have known a smidgen about. Take a hot minute and pick this book up, you won’t be able to put it down!
After reading the essay on the Vikings trying to settle Nova Scotia and being able to stand in Nova Scotia today and see cloud formations caused by Greenland's topography, I lost a lot of faith in everything else in this book. The author was obviously referring to present-day Newfoundland, not Nova Scotia. This is a pretty easy fact to check and is an embarrassing mistake to make. Most Canadian schoolchildren could probably tell you which province the Vikings landed in. Oh, and there is a heritage site there today. If something this simple to verify is wrong, how can I know how much of the other tales are true?
Meh. Essays about historical blunders. Most are about obvious subjects (Cannae, the Spanish Armada, the Kennedy assassination) and are loaded with typos and grammatical errors. Also, no information is sourced, and there is no bibliography.
I did enjoy Jody Lynn Nye's essay "Snow Job: How Not to Get Elected in Chicago," about government shenanigans around the time of the Blizzard of '78. As for the rest of the book, it seemed like a good idea (har har) but was executed poorly.
A nice mixture of small and major mishaps in the fields of politics, military strategy and others which inevitably turned out not as the one person starting it had intended.
Over all an amusing array of failure, even if not every story does manage to hold up to the same standard. I did even get some new detailss to know about history while enjoying the read... much.
An intriguing look at history in terms of failures - mostly military, but not completely. Somewhat America/Euro-centric, but most general interest history books in this country are.
Possibly a good resource in a high school AP History class, but needs bibliography/footnotes.
Much as the title suggests; when I bought it........ Interesting stories but very short with no footnotes or bibliography to back up their facts and interpretation. Left me questioning the veracity of their conclusions.