Anthologies, especially those that intend to cover a wide gamut of material loosely joined by a broad theme (in this case, political geography) are rather hard to review: you're dealing with multiple essays from a variety of authors, after all. And at that, cohesive anthologies are also very hard to edit and put together for an editor: readers/anthologies are a staple of college course-work for many topics and also a huge boon to non-academics with an interest in a specific topic, be it gothic literature or the history of Argentina or . . . well, or Indonesia. So with all that said, and bearing in mind someone on here recently criticized me (with some justification) for writing reviews that were too short and too vague, I will try herein to do my best to provide a good overview of this volume.
The task at hand was tough: the editor of this book had to encompass everything from current-day politics to colonial society to native arts like batik, and had to select essays that would best represent each topic, each period. Overall, I feel that effort was successful and then some. The essays included are all engaging and some outstanding. The essay on the Bugis epic La Galigo and the chapter "Drawings from a Japanese Camp" both provide a great introduction to their topics and are highly entertaining, too. Some such as "The First Dutch Voyage to the Indies" provide necessary historical accounts while others are contemporary, well-researched, and some are even quite personal. "The Old Order, The New Order—Political Climate" provides introspection on the topic you'd expect from it without becoming too detailed to put off a non-expert and a fine balance throughout the book is struck between detail and an awareness that this is, yes, a specialist book of sorts, but will be read by a diverse variety of people interested in Indonesia from grad students to ex-pats to travelers with a keen literary interest. I feel it meets the challenges for an area studies reader better than most in this regard.
This volume is part of a series by Duke University Press of nation-based readers, with many others already in that line concerning Latin America. It's the only one I've yet read but if it indicates the general quality of them all, I expect to read more.