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In the introduction, McWhirter provides an outstanding millennium time line showing "How it was" in 1000 B.C., AD 1, and AD 1000; "How it is" in AD 2000; and "How it will be" in AD 3000, a format followed more or less in the sections that follow. Using the first section as an example, under "Everyday Life" readers will find segments on "Food and Drink," "Lighting," "Clothing," "Marriage and Relationships," and "Banking and Finance," to name just a few. Under "Clothing," there are descriptions of typical garb for the period before AD 1, AD 1, and AD 1,000, with additional information under such topics as jewelry and hats. A table depicts the earliest surviving evidence for such items as trousers and buttons. The volume concludes with an index of people as well as a general index.
Although there are time lines in some sections, this book is more a topic-by-topic survey than a chronology. Libraries may want to purchase a reference copy for information about "firsts" and origins, but its real value will be in a personal collection.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Great Idea,
By st (canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Norris Mcwhirter's Book Of Millennium Records (Hardcover)
A useful summary of the changes over the past 2,000 years, but apparently the telephone was not important enough a development to mention!
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