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Paperback Complete Idiot's Guide to World Conflicts Book

ISBN: 0028643666

ISBN13: 9780028643663

Complete Idiot's Guide to World Conflicts

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

All of us are inundated daily with news from hot spots around the world, but making sense of the headlines and news is difficult without context. This book provides a background into the major... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Quick and dirty guide to world conflict

The book is what it purports to be--a quick and dirty guide to the world's conflicts. Other reviewers, who labeled it slanted or say it doesn't contain all the facts, miss the point. If you want ALL the facts about one of these conflicts, you can find those in the long, dry books that we academics write (please do! we need SOMEONE to read what we write). For each conflict the author writes about, he takes a particular angle. This simplifies the story, allows readers to get an overall feel for the participants and chain of events, and guides what he includes. For most readers, this makes the book useful and informative without being overwhelming. For specialists (or even just people who care about a particular issue) it is obvious that he leaves stuff out. As someone who has written on the subject of North Korea, I was pleased with his chapter on the subject. In limited space, it tells casual readers what they need to know, without getting bogged down in complications. A reviewer said it has an anti-US slant. I thought that if anything, it had a pro-US slant. I guess that's a good sign that it is actually somewhat balanced.

Incredible!

Ideal for George W. Bush.

Excellent

This book is quite good. It covers a lot of ground, is even-handed, and deals with issues fairly by giving both points of view. It's amazing to read what people do to each other, and the book endeavors to succinctly explain the varied reasons humans are so often in conflict. Well-written and excellent.

Chaos on the Brain

As anyone whose ever read a "Complete Idiots Guide" can tell you, they are definetly not all created equal; some are, infact, garbage, while others I have found to be, suprisingly, excellent, and indispensable. This one, "World Conflicts," I have found to be in the latter category. I have devoured this book since I bought it recently, underlining and scribbling all over it, eager to pick it up and continue reading it; its the thrill of learning, see. It comes down to this-yeah yeah, its a skeletal framework of history, but it gives you enough information so that you now have the power to know "what" you would like to investigate furthur. For instance, one gets a brief synopsis on a countries history, like say Sudan, it runs down some of its cutural history; who ran the country, who imperialized it, etc; what cou de tas have occured; whos fighting for what and what happened when; and, of course, all the gory details of histories sanguine epochs. In order to have obtained this amount of information about these many countries, one would have to scoure through stacks of history books assembling some info here and some there for ever. Now, I can rattle of some incredble strange information in casual conversation going through all of Egypts wars and leaders leading up to modern times and feeling quite pleased with myself and broadening the range of my world view and my capacity to interact in meaningful dialogues. OK, I have had the hardest time putting together what exactly happened in the Balkans some time now. It seems like all books start in the middle, like everyone knows exactly whats happened and why and they are just going over the details. I couldn't for the life of me find something or someone that could exaplain the big picture, anything that could satisfactorly explain what when down: Croations, Serbs, Ethnic Albanians, and how did these events have their roots in the First World War? The book expained it to me, simply and consisely...ahhhhhh. Now, I know what questions I'd like answered and can persue them in other places. Having trouble understanding who the Sunnies are? The Shiites? The Kurds? Are they religions or nationalities or both and what happened in Ruwanda and why this that and the other and whats the deal with Kashmire or Bangladesh or Korea or Sierre Leone or even the King of wars ourselves, the US, just how many wars have we had? This book is great, it puts history in perspective so that the present can be more clearly comprehended. I by no means agreed with everything the author wrote philsophically, but I respect his work and am thankful for having found it. Definetly Five Stars.
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