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new books

New history books in May 2023

by Anthony Webb, 1 June 2023

So what have we got? It's a pretty good haul this month, centered around Europe mostly but with travel around the world as a bit of a motif...

Click the book covers to see a zoomed in image and links to Amazon if you like to buy your books there.

X Marks the Spot: The Story of Archaeology in Eight Extraordinary Discoveries
The Great Defiance: How the Early Modern World Took on the British Empire
Goodbye, Eastern Europe: An Intimate History of a Divided Land
Anne Boleyn & Elizabeth I: The Mother and Daughter Who Changed History
Around the World in 80 Pots: The Story of Humanity Told Through Beautiful Ceramics
The Wager
Young Queens: Three Renaissance Women and the Price of Power
Virtuous Bankers: A Day in the Life of the Eighteenth-Century Bank of England
The World of Sugar: How the Sweet Stuff Transformed Our Politics, Health, and Environment Over 2,000 Years
Henry III: Reform, Rebellion, Civil War, Settlement, 1259-1272
The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram: An Elizabethan Sailor in Native North America
The Middle Kingdoms: A New History of Central Europe
Once Upon a Time World
Hawkhurst: Murder, Money and Smuggling in Georgian England
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The ones that I particularly like the look of are:

  • Hawkhurst: Murder, Money and Smuggling in Georgian England, by Joseph Dragovich - I have already read this one (review coming soon) and enjoyed the dramatic (and at times terrible) account of tea 18th Century English tea smugglers.

  • The World of Sugar: How the Sweet Stuff Transformed Our Politics, Health, and Environment Over 2,000 Years, Ulbe Bosma - because I would like to put all those fantastically profitable and horrifically inhumane New World sugar plantations into context.

  • The Wager, David Grann - this one seems like it has been around for ages already as I have seen positive reviews all over the place. A tale of a shipwreck and mutiny, beautifully recounted, so we are told.

  • Around the World in 80 Pots: The Story of Humanity Told Through Beautiful Ceramics, Ashmolean Museum - pots in museums used to make me run for the nearest cafe but I have come to appreciate why they are such an amazing record even if they do look a bit dull. This coffee table style book is not a history of pots, but instead the story of a number of the more glamorous ones from the Ashmolean collection, which spans thousands of years and much of the world.

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