Everything this guy touches turns into gold. His books, essays, plays and even his columns describing climate litigation. In this booklet, he does it again.
Van Reybrouck writes about Neutral Moresnet in his signature style. This 3,5 km² piece of land straddling Belgium and Germany was, unbeknownst to me, an independent country between 1816 and 1919 (!). He provides of course its history and its peculiarities, which include an outsized amount of brothels, distilleries and also its raison d'être: the zinc mine that Prussia and the United Kingdom of the Netherlands could not agree on who was entitled to own it.
Van Reybroeck also interviews locals and describes its history through the lens of a few protagonists who fled to this smuggler's hide-out. If you have read his book about the DRCongo, you will recognize his mix of anthropology, history and journalism at play.
Personally, whenever I walk around Paris I am remembered of this book and its history: much of Paris' well-known appartment blocks had their roofs covered with zinc sourced from the mine in Neutral-Moresnet. While not essential reading in the big picture of history, it's still a great read for Belgians interested in their own history.