Mar. 22nd, 2009

Right now I'm eagerly anticipating publication of several books - Corambis, Fragile Eternity, the new Paksenarrion books, the sequel to Terrier.

I'm greatly enjoying Hourani's History of the Arab Peoples.  It's well-written, tells you when there's debate about a point, and moves you through time and space smoothly.  All of those are unusual traits in a big beefy book of history, so I'm very pleased.  I'm sure there are points on which there is more debate than I'm getting, but I needed a good beginner's book on the topic, and this seems to be it.

Also, I think I've finally got the originating differences of opinion between Sunni and Shi'ite groups stuck in memory.  Only another 1000+ years of history to read before I figure out what the current differences of opinion are, but hey.  It's a start.  And I'm finally clear on my Ummayad vs. Abbasid caliphs (umm, though I still can't reliably spell Ummayad, sorry).

Mostly, I deal with my lack of historical knowledge by reading forwards as much as possible.  I much prefer to start a few thousand years ago and work forward.  All of this reading started with a desire to better know the 1800s.  Which I got a bit into and then decided - well, to understand this, I need to better know the 1600s.  Which I got a bit into and went, well, to understand this, I need to better know the 1400s.  Which I got a bit into and went, well, to better understand this, I need to read general histories of earlier empires, and of the continents as a whole.

I figure in about 10 years I'll be ready to start reading 1800s history again. 

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