Gaining and keeping the average reader's interest in history is a problem authors have faced for, well, probably most of history. One method is to try to liven things up with different takes or an unusual focus. That's the promise of The Mental Floss History of the World: An Irreverent Romp through Civilization's Best Bits. It's a promise not totally fulfilled.
The book approaches its subject like mental_floss magazine, trying to make gaining knowledge fun and accessible. Still, for the most part this 400+ page work is world history in a nutshell. In fact, each chapter starts with "In A Nutshell," a summary of the time period it covers
The 12 chapters use the same format throughout. The nutshell overview is followed by a timeline of a dozen or so significant events. Additional detail is provided in four ensuing subsections. The first, "Spinning The Globe," takes a generally geographic approach to looking at countries, empires, peoples or events. The other three look at a variety of events, people, and trends — good, bad, silly, or outrageous — impacting subjects as wide ranging as food, weapons, religion, alcohol, and sex. Each chapter concludes with statistical information relevant to the time period, such as average life expectancy, population, or the length of time it took to build or the size of certain structures. Throughout, there are sidebars on various events, kingdoms or personalities as well as items of trivia.
The consistent style makes this a world history work in which one chapter is not necessarily dependent on having read a prior chapter and it is easy to find the quickest summary for a chapter's time period. Where the book falters, though, is in trying to live up to its subtitle.
Granted, The Mental Floss History of the World uses a contemporary conversational tone and there's plenty of witticisms, puns and attempts at humorous asides. But it is irreverent only to the extent that including looks at the history and development of the pretzel, gin, or condoms as among "civilization's best bits" is considered irreverence. While the digressions may be somewhat more interesting or entertaining than the content of standard works of history, the fact remains that most of the book is, of necessity, a recounting of dates, empires, wars, and personalities.






Article comments
1 - Nick
It almost sounds like this guy's simmering upset about the irreverent romping these guys do with religion, which is awesome.
2 - Nick
...or just offended by how relaxed the book treats history...