Before I go ahead, I would just like to say that I very much enjoyed this book. Occasionally a bit bewildered at points, I still feel I came away from each chapter knowing, at the very least, the main characters, themes, and purposes that the chapter aimed to achieve.
As for the book itself, I think my expectations for this book were very different from the reality—Maurice Keen’s overarching focus is the rise and fall of a United Christendom, with the dawn of nationalism leading to gross disagreements between states, provinces, countries, merchant colonies etc. Going into this book, I’ll confess that I didn’t really know what to expect, exactly, but I imagined it would be a more vibrant history than what is written in this book.
In reality, I would say Keen ticks his criteria very well, and provides a very good springboard from which one could leap into a number of broad, or minute, topics; Papacy, Ottomans, Crusader states, Hundred Years War, Charlemagne and his descendants are just a few topics one could look deeper into, after having the outline of Medieval Europe provided by this book.
Now, I will say that I imagine Professor Keen made for a better professor than writer, mainly because the setting of professor would allow a student to ask Keen questions when confused. Maurice does seem to assume quite often in this book (and in his other work Chivalry) that you always know what he’s talking about off the cuff, without him needing to explain what things mean. Saracens or Moors, to your average reader for example, would mean absolutely nothing.
Overall, I am impressed with this book (I did actually really enjoy it!) and look forward to delving into certain topics a bit deeper.