A provocative and extraordinary contribution to wide-screen comparative history... a true banquet of ideas
- Boyd Tonkin, Independent
An important book - one that challenges, stimulates and entertains. Anyone who does not believe there are lessons to be learned from history should start here
Economist
Perhaps the smartest and sanest guide to the twenty-first century so far
South China Morning Post
One doffs one's hat to Morris's breadth, ambition and erudition
- Paul Kennedy, Sunday Times
Morris is the world's most talented ancient historian, a man as much at home with state of-the-art archaeology as with the classics as they used to be studied. Here, he has brilliantly pulled off what few modern academics would dare to attempt
- Niall Ferguson, Foreign Affairs
Morris handles huge ideas and transglobal theories with a breathtaking ease and humour
- Artemis Cooper, Evening Standard, Books of the Year
[an] enjoyable and thought-provoking book
- Nicholas Shakespeare, Telegraph
A lucid thinker and a fine writer
New York Times
The nearest thing to a unified field theory of history we are ever likely to get. With wit and wisdom, Ian Morris deploys the techniques and insights of the new ancient history to address the biggest of all historical questions: Why on earth did the West beat the Rest? I loved it.
- Niall Ferguson,
At last - a brilliant historian with a light touch. We should all rejoice.
- John Julius Norwich,
A formidable, richly engrossing effort to determine why Western institutions dominate the world . . . Readers will enjoy [Morris's] lively prose and impressive combination of scholarship . . . with economics and science. A superior contribution to the grand-theory-of-human-history genre
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)