The edition was a Scholar Select condition new. Good enough quality to read without strain.
The book was written in 1902. I actually had to source that to find out as it is not annotated on the copy though Amazon did have that as part of it's description. I had already read multiple other books that went over this time period or parts of the time period but from different prospectives, both narrower and wider, from the 40's up to 2014 I believe. Essentially this book takes you through the Summer Akkad period where Goodspeed was still at a disadvantage as to personages and dates as the history of this period was still being sorted when he wrote, right up to arrival of Cyrus the Great. By the time he was up to Hammurabi, the timeline settles to what your familiar with and the book fares extremely well and only gets better in exactness for the next 1500 years or so.
Before I came upon the book it was noted from other sources that book would concentrate primarily on the history which it did. It was also noted that he was writing from a Christian prospective with the Christian bias's of his day. That did not bare out at all as he checked any bias at door and they don't show up in his writings as he gave fair treatment to all.
The book does center around Babylon and Assyria but you do get fair insight into Egypt, Syria, Anatolia, back around to Elam and all various other peoples between flowing into the fertile crescent during the this vast time period. He also provides great insight beyond just history, as he covers religion, the gods, art, architecture, education, literature and host of other topics as they come up and not in a dry style but a very strong and flowing style as he weaves their contributions and impact into the fabric of the times.
The book has no maps, only two illustrations but you don't have a need of either, to include maps, as his word descriptions are easy to visualize whether he's talking terrain, buildings, cities or even persons, peoples or rulers from big to small. He writes with a certitude and has a command of the history which though gathered in 1902 seems to have held up quite well despite over a hundred years of new discovery. And not just held up, but given with the level of detail that sets you in period and makes you feel as if you are part of it as offers up insights that your not going to get from many other recent sources.
Anyway, for the lay reader or more serious scholar this book is highly recommended for a commanding read on the history of the Babylonians and Assyrians.