My choice of the year’s finest history books appeared in The Times this weekend. The theme was narrative and biography: 2010 has seen some very brilliant works of good old-fashioned storytelling and it was very nice to be able to sift through them all.
If you’re a subscriber, you can read the piece here. If you are not, here is a very quick synopsis of the list:
Christmas books: History
A History of the World in 100 Objects by Neil MacGregor (Allen Lane, £30)
Reassuringly accessible, effortlessly erudite
Buy here
The Making of the British Landscape by Francis Pryor (Allen Lane, £30)
From tumps to turbines - Man and Earth in a deadly but unstoppable dance
Buy here
Map of a Nation: A Biography of the Ordnance Survey by Rachel Hewitt (Granta, £25)
Illuminates the process by which our nation redrew itself
Buy here
The Last Stand: Custer, Sitting Bull and the Battle of Little Bighorn by Nathaniel Philbrick (Bodley Head, £20)
Absorbing retelling of the greatest western of all
Buy here
American Caesars: Lives of the US Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush by Nigel Hamilton (Bodley Head £25)
An excellent journey through recent American history
Buy here
The Crusades: The War For The Holy Land by Thomas Asbridge (Simon & Schuster, £30)
A glorious, appalling story and a vicious metaphor for present woes
Buy here
The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt by Toby Wilkinson (Bloomsbury, £30)
A sophisticated and complete account of the world’s first nation state
Buy here
Antony and Clopatra by Adrian Goldsworthy (Weidenfeld and Nicholson, £25)
A familiar love story told with brio
Buy here
Crown & Country: A History of England through the Monarchy by David Starkey (Harper Press, £25)
In an age when history is taught in modules and clumps, this is a useful, entertaining volume
Buy here
She-Wolves: The Women who ruled England before Elizabeth by Helen Castor (Faber, £20)
Each life is truly gripping and vital to understanding the reign of Gloriana
Buy here
The Story of England by Michael Wood (Viking, £20)
Wood has transcribed the genome of a community
Buy here
Molotov’s Magic Lantern by Rachel Polonsky (Faber, £20)
Dreamy, elaborate and poetic - a digressive tour of Russian history
Buy here
Crimea: The Last Crusade by Orlando Figes (Allen Lane, £30)
A model of wide-lens military history
Buy here








