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athenian_frog's review
2.75
It was interesting to see how many random people with money thought starting their own country was a good idea LOL. And even though I critique his tone, Defoe acknowledges the insane practices of colonial powers in a fun way. I just think a bit more of a balanced tone could have really helped my reading experience. The entries for most countries are very short (1-3pgs) so sometimes I felt removed from the text.
Moderate: Violence and Colonisation
bg_oseman_fan's review
5.0
Graphic: Racism, Slavery, and Colonisation
Moderate: Genocide, Hate crime, and Xenophobia
Minor: Death, Violence, and War
ronan900's review against another edition
4.5
Graphic: Racism and Colonisation
Moderate: Genocide, Hate crime, War, and Deportation
Minor: Pandemic/Epidemic
crystalisreading's review
4.0
There's a light tone to the writing that makes for easy and enjoyable reading, but does feel jarring sometimes, given the suffering that happened in conjunction with many of the stories. It is perhaps easy for a British white man to write about about these stories light-heartedly, as the suffering was generally experienced by the poor and residents of the global south. He does ruefully acknowledge the harms of imperialism and the blind ambition it often empowered. And yes, the people behind these shenanigans and any related suffering they caused were usually white men seeking glory and/or profits, whether for themselves or for a larger organization or country.
The illustrations, especially the illustrated maps, are charming, and help provide some extra context and information for each story. And there are certainly some genuinely interesting episodes in history that I found myself wanting to learn more about, from the fascinating short-lived Tangier International Zone, which seems like an important moment in global queer history, among other aspects of historical importance, to the more sad story of Maryland in Africa, a tiny subset of the Liberian experiment in resettling former slaves back in Africa. I may follow some of these pieces of information to further research, but honestly I've forgotten many of the other stories already.
So would I recommend this book? I think I would, if you're looking for a travel or summer read that is interesting without being too demanding. You can learn tidbits of history, without delving too deeply into the tragic repercussions of many of the stories, and perhaps find some topics of interest to research further. Would I read more books by this author? Probably not. I prefer books with more rigorous scholarship, if I'm going to spend my time reading about a nonfiction topic.
Either way, thank you to #NetGalley and Europa Editions for sharing a free digital advanced copy of #AnAtlasofExtinctCountries with me.
Graphic: Colonisation
Minor: Alcoholism, Death, Slavery, Xenophobia, Murder, Cultural appropriation, War, and Deportation
aileron's review against another edition
2.5
Moderate: Racism, Slavery, and Colonisation
Minor: Xenophobia, War, and Classism
nokikana's review
4.0
Graphic: Racism and Slavery
Moderate: Death, Xenophobia, and Colonisation
Minor: Violence, Trafficking, and War
reading_something_else's review
4.0
Minor: Death and Colonisation