March always seems to be a slower month for history books for some reason that I can't entirely fathom, but there's enough to be getting on with! I've shared a few notes below on a few that I would like to read.
Click the book covers to see a zoomed in image and links to Amazon if you like to buy your books there.
A few that I would like to dig into are:
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The Language Puzzle: How We Talked Our Way Out of the Stone Age, by Steven Mithen. As the author of one my all time favourite books (After the Ice) I'm favouribly desposed to anything by Steven Mithen. The title is a bit provocative, so it will be interesting to have a deeper look.
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Money and Promises: Seven Deals That Changed the World, by Paolo Zannoni. Perhaps not one to excite most people but as I work in this sort of area it hits the spot for me! Seems to be based on the early modern + late modern development of finance and whatnot in Europe.
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Writing on the Wall: Graffiti, Rebellion and the Making of Eighteenth-Century Britain, by Madeleine Pelling. A nice counterpoint to Gibbon and Austen: what did ordinary 18th century folk want to write / rant about?