Well-written and well-researched, and interesting for a history book...
Unfortunately there are a couple things wrong with it. But first of all: there was a lot of good here too
-The book is very easy to read. It's not dense and is easily readable in a couple of hours, and Kerrigan has a very direct, fascinating writing style that is seriously lacking in many history books.
-The book is well-researched. Incredibly so. There was nothing to doubt here and the author's knowledge of his topic is prevalent from the first page.
-The book did not feel biased. Often in this case, especially when dealing with Communism and horrible, ruthless rulers, there is a tendency of an author to bias. Kerrigan deals with that very well here. He calls out evil where evil is due, whichever side of the political spectrum it's on, and while he doesn't linger on the details of the atrocities against the Chinese people, he makes them very clear and doesn't just rush over them.
-The book is well-constructed. Kerrigan's writing style is enjoyable, and the amount of pictures figures nicely with the amount of text, and Kerrigan offers a large selection of asides from the main body of the text which offer great interest if you're bored of reading people constantly murdering each other.
Now unfortunately there were a few things wrong with the book.
-The focus of the book was very defined, which, I suppose, to some people, would be welcome. Kerrigan spends about 95% of the time on the politics of China, which for some would be enjoyable. But for a book about China's history this leaves out the other 99% of the population during these years. Even some asides about how people lived, the culture, the language evolution, would've been lovely. But there's nothing. Every page there's a new emperor and a new threat to China. But nothing about the actual people living there.
-Kerrigan doesn't reinforce anything he says. Seeing that he's covering over three thousand years of Chinese history, the amount of rulers and emperors, leaders, and court officials he talks about is unbelievable...and even though I finished reading it yesterday, I don't remember any of them except Mao, which I guess it a start.
So unfortunately while this is a great resource, and is a short, easy read, don't expect to learn much of anything from it unless you have a photographic memory. Good book, well-written, but it felt unnecessarily rushed and without an intent to actually teach people.