Yeah, Heather's writing style has been the subject of some complaints. I think O'Neill (who maintains a superlative blog on Late Roman/Early Post-Roman history writing) mentioned that he thought calling certain diplomacy "of the yah-boo sucks variety" would've been better suited to a lecture than an actual book. Still, his writing style is preferable to Goldsworthy's in The Fall of Rome, and he does take more definable positions than, say, Wickham in The Inheritance of Rome (which also covers the relevant period in a lot less depth due to having a solid five centuries and another half of the Mediterranean left to deal with).
You never got back to me on what you were looking at for that reading list, btw.
You never got back to me on what you were looking at for that reading list, btw.
