To put it simply, The History of Argentina is precisely how a brief overview of a country should look. These books that tackle an entire nation’s history (especially in less than 200 pages) tend to be dicey, mostly because it’s usually a bit too simplified or misses important context. Author Daniel K Lewis did not have this issue.
Starting just before the colonial era, this covers a very broad spectrum of events all the way up until 2000 that paints the nations growth and history in a wonderfully objective way, with context to basically everything. Each section would relate back to the previous one to give events the proper tone that led to them, something that many authors are bad at. It managed to stay focused through the entire work, honing in heavily on colonialism, wars, politics, economy, and of course the niche things to Argentina’s character such as Peronism and the “Conquest of the Wilderness.” It covered just the right amount of detail for this type of thing around leaders like Rosas or Perón, and my only real gripe is that the last 30 pages were tough to get through. After the Falkland conflict and the so called “dirty wars,” this was basically a collection of how the economy was doing each year and who the people liked or didn’t like. I suppose the lack of activity meant better things for the population. A few other moments felt a little dull, but otherwise I really couldn’t recommend this enough for folks interested in a focused, nuanced look at Argentina’s existence.