Amazon.com Review
"For virtually every episode described in these pages," Oxford historian Martin Gilbert remarks, "a complete volume could be written." Cramming 19 years into just over 900 pages of text (the maps, photos, index, and bibliography easily stretch the full length over 1,000) is a daunting task, but Gilbert rises to the challenge with a panoramic effort, offering a genuinely global perspective that, coming after several looks back at the "American century," serves as an excellent reminder that there's a whole world beyond the borders of the United States.
The Second World War, as one might expect, holds a central position in the text, occupying the entire middle third and exerting a powerful hold over the events preceding and following it. The opening years, for example, contrast the efforts of many world leaders to maintain lasting peace despite the rise of Nazi Germany. The years after the war see Europe--and then the rest of the world--divided up between the two power blocs engaged in a new, "cold" war. Gilbert neatly compresses his theme of the defense of liberty, and the lessons learned in the fight against authoritarian regimes, by noting that "in 1938, Neville Chamberlain had spoken of Czechoslovakia as 'a far-away country of which we know nothing.' Truman said in 1950, 'Korea is a small country thousands of miles away, but what is happening there is important to every American.'"
From Publishers Weekly
Gilbert, the official biographer of Churchill and one of the most prolific historians alive, aspires to be the Livy of our age. His history of the century is, literally, a chronicle?the chapters are named for years (or, during the peak of WWII, for parts of years). Noting that "for virtually every episode mentioned in these pages, usually in a short paragraph, a complete volume could be written," Gilbert makes no claim to offer any new interpretation of events. Instead, he gives readers an overview of the policies of governments, the movements of armies and the havoc brought down on civilian populations. Given the years covered, the book is essentially a history of WWII; Gilbert even shows how subsequent events?the triumph of Chinese Communists, the establishment of Israel, the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the emergence of independent nations in Africa?were all, to some degree, continuations or direct consequences of WWII. By no stretch of the imagination is this a cultural or social history, but Gilbert salts his text with eclectic references to the fabric of everyday life in America and Europe. The first chapter, for instance, after covering Stalin's purges and Hitler's consolidation of power, concludes somewhat abruptly with this clause: "...and in the United States the Ritz cracker was introduced." Based on the first two volumes, it's fair to say that Gilbert's history of the century is an exemplary work of what might be called narrative reference. As a basic primer on major events and as a springboard toward further historical reading, his fluid book of years is invaluable.
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