A look at the twentieth century by a respected historian examines the most influential events of the last hundred years in chronological order with an eye toward the long-term changes that have occurred because of them
John Morris Roberts, CBE, was a British historian, with significant published works. From 1979-1985 he was Vice Chancellor of the University of Southampton, and from 1985-1994, Warden of Merton College, Oxford. He was also well known as the author and presenter of the BBC TV series The Triumph of the West (1985).
An exhaustive yet accessible tour of every continent during the past 100 years. Clear-headed, logical, no agenda. One can't read it without realizing we are 20% into the next century and that we are slipping backwards as time moves us forward.
One of those books that you can't read without a green pen because British writing (and editing) is SO BAD. Just shockingly piss-poor. And this reads more like a cataloging of his musings on the century rather than an attempt to educate the reader; even if it had been written clearly and/or edited to high hell, the content is still all over the place -- chronologically and geographically.
It is a very interesting history book. Possibly in terms of readability it was the best one I have ever read. The book is divided into short sections with detailed analysis. I learnt a lot and recommend it to everyone.
A good overview of 20th c. world history (with an emphasis on [b]world[/b]), but overall somewhat thin soup. Considering the page count Roberts chose to summarize rather than edit. Reads flatly but not terrible. A straight history, rather than one that explores dimensions. Good for reference.