I was required to read this for class, otherwise the price of the book (around $50) would have been prohibitive. However, I was in for a pleasant surprise. This is by far one of the most riveting history books I've ever read, added to the fact that even its price suggests that it was not for the general reading public. Scholarly books are not made to entertain, and entertaining history books are known to dumb the material down. But the prose in here is clear, arresting and does a great service to the study of Byzantium, fully delineating the complexities of the events that followed the recovery of Constantinople in 1261. I still cannot recommend this to the general public unless you know a thing or two about Byzantine history and bear with the sad, pathetic decline of this once-great state, because alas, there are cheaper histories out there for the interested layman. If you can get hold of a library copy, though, go for it. Byzantine history is highly underrated and many influential primary sources untranslated into English, and you might just fall in love with this unjustly ignored segment of history.