Thanks to Netgalley and Profile Books for providing an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Maxim Samson's book, Earth Shapers, is a standout in the recent wave of books that explore the intersection of geography, history, and politics. While Tim Marshall's Prisoners of Geography and its sequel The Power of Geography offer a compelling, and at times entertaining, argument for geographical determinism, Samson presents a more nuanced and profound view. He challenges the idea that humanity is merely a captive of its physical environment. Instead, Samson's work, like Paul Richardson's Myths of Geography, argues that we are active participants in shaping our world. This serious and scholarly tone is one of the book's most compelling features, providing a deeper intellectual experience than some of its more populist counterparts.
Samson's examples are both wide-ranging and fascinating, showcasing how human ingenuity and action have fundamentally altered landscapes and, in turn, history. He explores the astounding Incan road system, the transformative construction of the Panama Canal, and the geopolitical implications of Mozambique's colonial railways. Samson also delves into lesser-known stories, such as the sacred Baekdu-daegan mountain range in Korea and the ongoing efforts of the Great Green Wall in Africa. The book's strength lies in its ability to present these diverse case studies as a cohesive narrative of human agency. It's an appreciation of the serious tone and detailed research that makes Earth Shapers a must-read for anyone interested in how we have truly "mastered" and reshaped the world. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and will be looking out for similar future works by the author.
This book also managed to use the word "palimpsest" even more often than Richard Dawkins in "The Genetic Book of the Dead" and I thought that could not be done.
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