Historical Book Recomendation Thread

Those are important for me, too, but nerve-wracking to go back and forth between after a while. I wish that they would flip upwards so that we could always see them.

Also, when going through footnotes and sources, is it better to tear them out of the book so you can focus on them and read at the same time, or go through them after reading the book itself?

Given I'm not a serious historian, I sometimes skip footnotes or appendices, and sometimes I read them.

It's the Second Law of History Books that maps may not include the names of towns or locations mentioned in the text.:crazyeye:

Comic Sans and Arial Black? I be confused.

But yeah, there's nothing more aggravating than a book that constantly refers to different locations that are not labeled on the included map. That's kind of the purpose of having a map.
 
I find it real author dependent. Some authors put their most interesting ideas in footnotes, some of the consistently their most boring. So I read the interesting ones.
 
Paul Kennedy. Scholar or peddler of pop history?
 
His Rise and Fall of The Great Powers was required reading in undergrad history and foreign relations classes.
 
His Rise and Fall of The Great Powers was required reading in undergrad history and foreign relations classes.

Yeah, I know. I get reading material from syllabuses I can find on the internet. The Next 100 Years was recommended reading on an IR course, so stahp making fun of me for being a fanboy.
 
His Rise and Fall of The Great Powers was required reading in undergrad history and foreign relations classes.
Lots of pretty terrible books are required reading in such courses, though.

I don't think that that particular book is terrible, but although it included some sections that were pretty good (e.g. the coverage of the fiscal-military state) it also included some sections that were pretty bad (e.g. the section on the Habsburg 'universal monarchy', and, to a lesser extent, the part on the runup to the First World War).

Kennedy's clearly not a pop-historian and has produced legit work in a lot of areas, especially on British military and diplomatic policy in the Victorian/Edwardian/Georgian eras. One of the key aspects of his work, though, is that in my view it has tended to be, well, very British. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, although it did discuss other European states, and later the US, Japan, and China, was very much written from the perspective of somebody who viewed almost the entire period under discussion from London. His work on the Anglo-German rivalry immediately before WWI, although very good, again was framed in the terms that British parliamentarians and pundits and later historians saw the issue in, not in anybody else's.

There's a very perceptible skew to a lot of Kennedy's writing, and it's reduced the value of his analysis, in my opinion.
 
yes it has a bunch of maps

Yay!

On a more serious note, I'll put it on my list of books to eventually read. I have to decide if I want to pay for it (the price isn't that bad used) or see if I can get it from a library.
 
An instant answer by you, Owen, presumably the moment you saw my name by the thread. You've become quite the paternalist. :D

(There's an adoption joke screaming to be made here, but I'm not sure how to phrase it.)


Moving on: is Paul Kennedy considered good history?

Owen is doing his best to try to get you to follow the correct and easiest way to do things. He's not being paternalist or doing this because he hates you, he's just explaining to you how all of this works. Owen could not be serious and just say he loves and envies everything you do, but that's not how we work around here.
 
Owen is doing his best to try to get you to follow the correct and easiest way to do things. He's not being paternalist or doing this because he hates you, he's just explaining to you how all of this works. Owen could not be serious and just say he loves and envies everything you do, but that's not how we work around here.

I'm facetious, lol.
 
Anyone have some good resources for ancient Mesopotamia?
 
I'm trying to expand my reading list from Cold War Africa and the Russian Revolution. Does anybody know of any good books on post-War Europe, say from 1945 to the completely randomly chosen date of 1960? Preferably a focus on the Attlee Government, but I can live without that.
 
I'm trying to expand my reading list from Cold War Africa and the Russian Revolution. Does anybody know of any good books on post-War Europe, say from 1945 to the completely randomly chosen date of 1960? Preferably a focus on the Attlee Government, but I can live without that.

Funny, I'm just getting into Cold War/post-WWII African wars. Any recommendations on the Portuguese involvement, Ogaden, the Congo wars, Rhodesia, Angola, Biafra, etc.?
 
I'm trying to expand my reading list from Cold War Africa and the Russian Revolution. Does anybody know of any good books on post-War Europe, say from 1945 to the completely randomly chosen date of 1960? Preferably a focus on the Attlee Government, but I can live without that.

If you're looking for German janx, I recently read Mary Fulbrook's A Concise History of Germany, and although I had a ton of problems with her pre- and early-modern sections, her modern, and in particular her post-war German sections were excellent, so I'd recommend giving her a try.

http://www.amazon.com/Mary-Fulbrook/e/B001H9PY0Y/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1390516090&sr=8-1
 
@ Phrossak: If you are looking for a shorter overview, Odd Arne Westad did a good job in The Global Cold War, although it quite obviously has a larger focus than just Africa.
I would recommend Martin Meredith's The Fate of Africa* as an excellent overview text. He does a good job of highlighting many of the problems in Africa during the Cold War and decolonization, with a brief foray into post-Cold War history sufficient to cover the end of Aparthied, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Congo Wars.
I would also recommend Shake Hands with the Devil by Romeo Dallaire, the UN general in charge of the Rwandan Mission. It definitely gives a good sense of the challenges facing PK operations and 'on the ground' situations in Africa.
Lastly, Dachs recommended to me Africa's World War by Gerard Prunier on the various Great Lake Wars. I haven't read it, but considering Dachs recommended it, it can't be that bad.

*I think it was re-published as The State of Africa, but I'm not sure.
 
I am a student of US history, and collect presidential biographies, which tend to lend a different slant on things, as it tends to concentrate on how individuals affected, and were affected, by history. The Years of Lyndon Johnson, Master of the Senate, is not only a great insight into the working of our Congress, but how LBJ operated. Entertaining, informative, and slightly scary.
 
Both. It is amazing how things are controlled. And Johnson was a master manipulator, and both brilliant and ruthless. I joke that he probably had naked pictures of me with hookers, and I wasn't even alive when he was in the Senate.

There is a great story about how he put together a block of voters to pass the voter's rights bill. He did believe in helping the poor and underprivileged. But he also wanted to be president, and knew that in order to be elected as a Southerner, he needed to pass some civil rights. So he did the following:

1. Explained to the Southerners that he was still with them, but that it would help them for a southerner to be Preseident, and that giving the Black voting rights was less than they might get with others.

2. The Western states were concerned about private water rights, but ambivalent with regard to civil rights. The north as a whole was more concerned about civil rights, but did not care about water rights, since it was not an issue in the east. He convinced the two groups to support each other, and put together a block of voters large enough to overcome the southerners who were against civil rights.

In all seriousness, I think Johnson is under-rated, and brilliant. Imperfect, but that is hardly unique.
 
It's the Second Law of History Books that maps may not include the names of towns or locations mentioned in the text.:crazyeye:

Alternatively, you get the equally confusing ones with only the places listed in the text, which leave out everything you might use to get your bearings as to where the place actually is.
 
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