‘Masterly mapping out of a new world order’ – Evening Standard
Peter Frankopan is Professor of Global History at Oxford University where he is also Senior Research Fellow at Worcester College. The Silk Roads: A New History of the World was published by Bloomsbury in 2015.
Masterly mapping out of a new world order . . . Peter Frankopan has
gone up in the world since his bestselling Silk Roads history was
published to great acclaim in 2015 – and deservedly so
*Evening Standard*
I enjoyed The New Silk Roads. I learnt a great deal about recent
developments in Central Asia and elsewhere. Frankopan is a
brilliant guide to terra incognita
*Sunday Times*
The book is diverting, eclectic and has serious intent. Its thesis
that Eurasia is developing a sense of cohesion, largely powered by
China’s restless ambition, is a sound one
*The Times*
Absorbing . . . One of the slightly dizzying effects of reading
this book is realising the sheer amount of change that has taken
place globally in just three years
*Irish Times*
Peter Frankopan has written as prescient a modern history as
possible . . . Frankopan’s skill is that he able to step back a few
more paces from the world map and global events than most modern
commentators, whilst encouraging us to use history as a way of
looking forward than regressing into the past
*Total Politics*
If you are only going to read one non-fiction book in the coming
year, let it be The New Silk Roads by Dr Frankopan . . . This book
has all the answers and some more
*News on Sunday Pakistan*
Entertaining . . . Peter Frankopan has a sharp eye for startling
facts, and no reader will leave The New Silk Roads with her sense
of the state of the world unchanged
*Times Literary Supplement*
Frankopan has written another valuable and idiosyncratic book. He
has the gift of perspective – the capacity to see the wood for the
trees – which he combines with a Tolstoyan knack for weaving little
details into the broader sweep of human affairs
*Daily Telegraph*
Peter Frankopan’s surprise 2015 bestseller The Silk Roads was a
gripping world history that centred on the east. His follow-up The
New Silk Roads takes the story right up to the present, as a
resurgent China seeks to recreate the old trade routes
*Prospect*
A stimulating primer on modern geopolitics, written with a
historian’s eye for colour and detail
*Daily Telegraph*
Superb
*BBC*
An entertaining and carefully researched account of a new Chinese
chapter in global history, and one where it finally makes sense to
see Eurasia, with Europe at one end and China at the other, as a
single connected whole
*Spectator*
Filled with an avalanche of remarkable facts . . . Peter Frankopan
is on a mission to show that the world is no longer all about
Europe and the West
*Het Financieele Dagblad NL*
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