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118 of 120 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I loved this book in l936 when I was in the third grade.
I am almost 70 years old and have never forgotten how much I enjoyed it when my third grade teacher read it to our class a chapter at a time along about l936. I now have 7 grandchildren and recently was able to find and purchase a used copy . This book gave me a sense of the history of the world at a very young age and I hope it will do the same...
Published on April 12, 1998 by PINEYOK@MSN.COM

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88 of 102 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A very bad idea
Harsh as it sounds, I would like to make the argument that no matter how much children enjoy it, this book is still a very bad idea. The biggest problem with it is its overtly racist framework, something that may have seemed perfectly all right when it was first written in the 1920's, but that is quite shocking today. The author is very clear at the outset about who...
Published 21 months ago by Carla B. Rabinowitz


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118 of 120 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I loved this book in l936 when I was in the third grade., April 12, 1998
By 
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
I am almost 70 years old and have never forgotten how much I enjoyed it when my third grade teacher read it to our class a chapter at a time along about l936. I now have 7 grandchildren and recently was able to find and purchase a used copy . This book gave me a sense of the history of the world at a very young age and I hope it will do the same for them. I rank it in the top five books I have ever read.
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51 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Prevented me from ever thinking of history as boring., March 18, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
I was enrolled in the Calvert homeschooling program, and this text made history my favorite subject. The author didn't bleed all the interesting parts out. He wasn't afraid of religion or race (concepts that drove so much of history). Whenever I hear of subjects such as Constantine or the French Revolution, it's what I read in "The Child's History of the World" that comes back to me (much of it stuff I've never heard mentioned elsewhere). When I got to high school and went to a public school, the history texts were pathetic.
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56 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous!, August 19, 2000
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
This book is a true classic which our whole family enjoys. It sparks the imagination in a way that only few books can. I recommend this book to everyone and it should be included as required reading at the elementary or even junior high level. One thing you should realize is that this is a book without a lot of "fluff", no color drawings, etc., but still better than the majority of newer discussions of history. I didn't find it to be either pro-Christianity or anti-Christianity.
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88 of 102 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A very bad idea, May 31, 2010
Harsh as it sounds, I would like to make the argument that no matter how much children enjoy it, this book is still a very bad idea. The biggest problem with it is its overtly racist framework, something that may have seemed perfectly all right when it was first written in the 1920's, but that is quite shocking today. The author is very clear at the outset about who "we" are: white Christians of European descent. And the word he uses - which even the 1947 revision does not cut - is "Aryan", an imaginary racial category that reached its peak of popularity in Nazi Germany.

The author carefully explains that there were "just three different white families, and from these families all the white people in the world are descended". Although the book does not explicitly say so, these three families, the Aryans, the Semites, and the Hamites, are presumably descended from the three sons of Noah. (For the discredited 19th-century racist origins of this theory, see [..].) The paragraph that has stayed in my mind since I first found a copy of this book 20 years ago runs:

"If your name is Henry or Charles or Wiliam, you are probably an Aryan.

"If it is Moses or Solomon, you are probably a Semite.

"If it is Shufu or Rameses, you are probably a Hamite."

According to Mr. Hillyer, all the major civilizations of the world have been created by white people (the inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent are helpfully identified as white). Although Confucius and the Buddha get respectful nods, the civilizations of Asia are not worth mentioning. When Asians do come into the story, they appear as "tribes of yellow people" led by "terrible fighters" like Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan, who wanted to "wipe off the face of the earth all white people and everything that white people had ever built." Russians, indeed, are suspect, because "although they were white people, they were living so close to the yellow people in China that they had become much like them in many of their ways." And astonishingly, for a book that was written in Baltimore in the twentieth century, people of African descent simply do not exist. The author muses that "we don't know how nor when nor where colored people first lived, though it is interesting to guess," and that's the end of it.

Racism aside, the other main problem with the book is gross inaccuracy. According to the author, humans did not discover fire until long after they had been hunting with stone spears and painting magnificent pictures on cave walls (with charcoal among other things.) And almost immediately after the discovery of fire, they discovered copper and tin and the Bronze Age began. But only in the Tigris and Euphrates valley and along the Nile (where the white people lived); everyone else was still living in caves.

Things get better as the book goes along, but there are still plenty of instances in which myth is presented as historical fact. (I leave out the chapters in which the Old Testament is treated as literal history, since I know that many readers of this review will not share my views on that issue.) People in Columbus' time did not actually believe the world was flat. George Washington did not actually chop down the cherry tree. And printing and gunpowder were not actually invented in Europe, but were known in China hundreds of years earlier. But all of these tales are treated as fact. The chapter on Gutenberg starts out with the sentence, "Up to this time there was not a printed book in the whole world" - although this month's National Geographic contains a picture of a printed Chinese book from the ninth century. In addition, both the Reformation and the American Revolution were apparently due entirely to resentment over taxes. The great ideals of human freedom and equality and democratic self-government - certainly the most inspiring parts of the American story that I told my children - are considered too advanced for the readers of this book.

True, children love stories about people, and the stories in this book are charmingly told, if your children don't mind the condescending tone. And true, they stick in your brain. Many years ago I had a children's history book rather similar to this one, and what sticks in my brain about Elizabeth I of England - arguably the greatest ruler in European history - is that she was very vain and had lots of dresses. Hillyer improves on this picture, but only very slightly. His Elizabeth is still vain, and has lots of lovers (!), but she does manage to defeat the Spanish Armada. Hillyer is so impressed by this that he considers her "more man than woman", and jokingly calls her "King Elizabeth." Is there some reason that we are still sending this message to our daughters?

I'll grant you that it's a good thing for children to have heard of Pericles, Louis XIV and Peter the Great. The Italian Renaissance gets a chapter, there is commendable attention to the contributions of the Muslim civilization of the Middle Ages, and there is at least one hint that not all the motives of the Crusaders were entirely admirable. But in general, most "world history" happened in Europe, and after the Renaissance it generally involved English-speaking people. Among the missing pieces are the era of European colonization, slavery, the Industrial Revolution, the continent of South America both before and after the Spanish conquest, and the entire history of Native Americans.

I would argue that even for small children, a view of "the world" that completely leaves out the voices and experiences of non-white and non-English-speaking people, that in fact treats most of them as if they are either strange "yellow races" or just not worth noticing, is potentially crippling in the twenty-first century. It conditions its readers to see people who are not just like them as alien, incomprehensible, and vaguely frightening - "them" rather than "us". Attention, homeschoolers: your children will be growing up into a world, and a country, full of people not just like them. In order to function in that world they will need some understanding of, and respect for, the different experiences of those people. Third grade is nowhere near too early to start.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is an outstanding book, and it's back in print!, June 3, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
This book is currently back in print and available for purchase directly from the Calvert school in Balitmore, Maryland
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a wonder, and it brings families closer, July 11, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
This book is a wonder, and its a delight that it is available again. In 1965, when I was nine years old, my father got it in a second hand bookstore for me. He had read it back in 1936, when he was 10 years old! I loved all of it. It conveys much information, of course, but also values: a passion for history, for human progress, and for peace. I have been searching for it for my own son over the last two years, remembering only the titile of the Spanish translation I had read, to find only a reserve copy in the main library of Barcelona, and now I find an access to the original English version through the web! It was an important part of my education, and I wish to share it with my son and with others. One last wish: it should be translated again!

JR Villalbi, Barcelona, Spain
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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very useful book, June 10, 2006
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful overview of world history, covering major dates from Menes, king of Egypt, to the United Nations. It is not at all difficult reading - it was written for children of about nine. However, it's useful for anyone who wants to have a general idea of the 'geography' of history; how often do you think of the Trojan War occurring at the same time that David was king in Israel? This book does a wonderful job of giving you the big picture.

Don't expect this book to give you a Reformed Christian perspective. Christianity was assumed at the time the book was written, but the author believes in salvation by works, and evolution.
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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good book, May 21, 2002
By 
J. Thieme "quo-vadis" (Vista, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I read this to my kids last year and they enjoyed it. It presents world history in small, manageable bites for kids ages 8 and up...
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Story Which Endures Through The Decades, March 14, 2006
Years ago I recalled a friend of mine who was in her early 80's telling me about this particular book. Her parents had read it to her as a child, she thought it was the most wonderful story she had ever heard. Now that I am a homeschooling parent I have to agree with my friend. The book was written in the mid 1930's by the headmaster of Calvert School, V.M. Hillyer.It has been updated over the decades so its contents are current. Throughout the book there are illustrations which in my opinion are works of art which add to the story. We are currently reading this story to our 5 1/2 year old daughter and she loves it! I would highly recommend this book as a read aloud for family reading or for your own personal enrichment.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Consider context and you'll treasure this book!, February 2, 2006
This review is from: A Child's History of the World (Hardcover)
I first encountered this gem of a book when I decided to home educate my children for a few years, and it came with my daughter's fourth grade Calvert School kit. Yes, it is European ethnocentric and there are the references to god, but our family was and remains enlightened enough and able to explain *context* even to children.

Whether you are a bible thumper or dedicated atheist, or somewhere in between, don't discount this book just because of your beliefs! There is much that is amazing and simply golden in this book. As a historian, I cannot think of a better way to introduce Western Civilization to a child. The storybook format is a real winner with kids, and if you're reading it to them aloud, as I did, well, play editor as you go along! Or take the time to explain the context of the times in which it was written.

I will be ordering another copy of this book, as my original copy was stolen by some rather sneaky and acquisitive ex-inlaws (you know who you are!).

This book is a don't miss. And it is also excellent for adults who don't like history but recognize the need for such knowledge.
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A Child's History of the World
A Child's History of the World by V.M. Hillyer (Hardcover - June 1992)
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