"The odds have always seemed, at least, to be stacked against the microstates, with little fishes (sic.) being eaten by larger fishes (sic.). But even the greatest empires fall".
Pretty much all you need to know about European microstates. Some chapters are just a neverending list of names, titles, dates and battles. Others are very much entertaining, although never falling into the realm of anecdotes. While not a historian myself, there are a few facts to be double-check in this book, such as the statement that the Vatican City is a Member State of the European Union (never!). There is a clear fixation of the author with SMOM, as 25% of the book is dedicated to the chapter covering this unique state with a (reallly real) territory and most parallelism between microstates are drawn against the SMOM most often. It is also never explained why Luxembourg is not included as a microstate; perhaps it did not fall neatly into the arguments of ethnohistory and statehood-building advanced by the author. I also appreciated the chapter about micronations as officially unrecognised microstates; it did help understand the singularity of microstates in Europe and reinforce my wish to visit them all (only 1/6 so far)!