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Guns, Germs and Steel

Fiction Discuss Guns, Germs and Steel in the WWII Books forums; I've been reading the book "Guns, Germs and Steel" by Jared Diamond after watching a program on PBS. I'm only ...

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    The Pop-Tart Whisperer Njaco's Avatar
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    Guns, Germs and Steel

    I've been reading the book "Guns, Germs and Steel" by Jared Diamond after watching a program on PBS. I'm only about a third way thru (it can be a difficult read) but I've become fascinated by this history of human society. The book is truly eye-opening.

    Has anyone else read it and are most of the assumptions by Mr. Diamond on point or skewered?


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    Read it. Didn't think much of it. Goes by the idea that most of human achievement is an accident of location. The thinking of the book is very linear. A+B=C. Nothing else can get in the way. If some point of human history does not fit the theory, it gets discarded.

    Not an easy read either. Not enjoyable. I equate it to the idea that, "if you suffer for something, it must be worth it". Sadly, this is rarely the truth. "Guns, Germs and Steel" is overated. There is some good stuff in it, decent theories. But he does not do a good job when he sums it up. His attempt at "the grand theory of everything" fails.

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    Senior Member twoeagles's Avatar
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    I tried to read this book about 5 years ago and put it down halfway through,
    for most of the reasons Timshatz gives. Very crusty reading even if
    one is given to a love of social anthropology. It boils down to if you are
    lucky enough to be born where the ground is fertile with plenty of water and
    a mountain of iron ore on the back 40, then the world will be your oyster.

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