A Little History of the World
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #71671 in Books
- Published on: 2005-09-22
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 304 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'Conversational in style, as of a grandparent talking with a child, the story of humanity from prehistory is told.' --Peter Andrews, School Librarian, vol. 54 no. 2, Summer 2006
'...a perfect present for a child with an enquiring mind. I wish it had been available when I was young.' --Literary Review, September 2005
'Had I a dozen grandchildren...I'd order two dozen copies, one for the children, the other for their parents.' --Evening Standard, 26 September, 2005
Literary Review, September 2005
'...a perfect present for a child with an enquiring mind. I wish it had been available when I was young.'
Literary Review, September 2005
'I doubt if it could be bettered...a perfect birthday present for a child with an enquiring mind.'
Customer Reviews
If only....
...there was one book you could turn to which would take you through the entirety of human history in an entertaining as well as educational manner. Well guess what: there is, and 'A Little History..' is it. Don't be dissuaded by the fact that this is nominally a children's book. Unless you have devoted years to the study of history, you will finish this book a more knowledgeable person than when you started.
And for those who are put off by the size of the text, the audio version is available and beautifully read by the author's grandson.
For all ages
I read this to see if it would be a suitable present for some friend's children, and wound up keeping it myself! You'd have to be one whiz at history not to learn a great deal from this book, it was great to have so many names that rang a vague bell finally put in context in such a concise and entertaining way. An excellent read, and one of the best-presented books in terms of binding and typography I've seen in a while.
The reviewer below who worried about the 'unrestrained paean to Marxism' clearly didn't read Gombrich's thoughtful and honest afterword, where he reviews his own opinions from over 50 years back and concludes that he was mistaken about the Soviet Union (to which he only devotes literally five lines which are not particularily opinionated) and too hard on industrialization. He also corrects his younger self on his orignal, parochial view of the Treaty of Versailles. I honour his candour in keeping the original lines in. In any case the idea that this book, with or without the afterword, is propaganda for ANY ideology is frankly absurd, and I would hate to see any reasonable person avoid the "Little History" from that mistaken impression.
Of course anyone will quarrel with the presentation of parts of history on which have an opinion-- personally I think he was rather too hard on Elizabeth I and rather too easy on the Chinese empire and the Aztecs! But that's the consequence of Gombrich's vivid storybook style, I think, and the fact that he has to deal with very complex situations in a couple of lines. I was especially impressed with the steady grace with which he handles potentially explosive religious issues. On the whole I don't think any but the most committed idealogue, left or right, would have a serious issue with their children reading this book. His view of history is probably best summed up with this:
"Now let's take a last look at these people dressed in skins, as they paddle their boats made of hollowed-out tree turnks towards their villages of huts... Do you think much has changed since then? Ther were people just like us. Often unkind to one another. Often cruel and deceitful. Sadly, so are we. But even then a mother might sacrifice her life for her child and friends might die for each other. And how could it be otherwise?"
Now to pick up another copy for those kids...
A true fairy tale of many thousand years
This is -short as a fairy tale- the humanistic and graecophil way to look at the history of mankind, a product of generous sensibility.
Of course, the middle-european perspective does not leave the author in his "Little History of the world", this propably being one reason why it took this in many countries best-selling text so long to get translated into the English language.
The translation is often too simply drawn from German. So, for instance when on page 204 "Just think what (...) such a way of life must have cost" arises from "Bedenke nur was solch Lebenswandel gekostet haben muß."
Many might find, that it is more important to write a history of the world based on the advances in technology.
But the humaine perspectives implies that the author has neither big knowledge nor concern on mathematics and technologies in general.
The text is not only therefore a book intended for young readers and as such a brilliant and excellent overview altogether.




