A great read for anyone with a passing interest in geography, history, or urban life, Kotkin weighs in at 160 pages sans bibliography, but still weaves from the Peloponnesian War to ‘people of the book’ to the city beautiful movement, from Herodotus to Marx, from Cyrus the Great to Napoleon to Deng Xiaoping. You will leave with a brief outline of the major ideas, thinkers, and leaders who influence historians’ understanding of the modern city, and a sufficient basic framework of facts on which informed discussion can be placed.
Kotkin is an anglophile, and he believes Britain is responsible for the invention of the institutions and political technology of the modern city; building on top of metropolitan innovations by medieval Islamic cities, cosmopolitan innovations by the ancient Persians, and civil innovations by the Greeks and Romans. The style is necessarily terse and referential, sacrificing detail for scope and readability. Overall, this spritely review of essential knowledge is a pleasant way to spend an afternoon.