Prisoners of geography Our world explained in 12 simple maps

Tim Marshall

Maps - 2021

"An illustrated book of maps that explains how the land we live on shapes life as we know it, showing how the geography of different countries has driven politics, commerce, and international relations throughout history"--

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Subjects
Genres
Children's atlases
World atlases
Published
New York : The Experiment [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Tim Marshall (author)
Other Authors
Grace Easton (illustrator), Jessica Smith
Edition
Illustrated young readers edition
Physical Description
1 atlas (74 pages) : color illustrations, color maps ; 31 cm
Audience
Ages 8+
Grades 4-6
ISBN
9781615198474
  • What does "prisoners of geography" mean?
  • Russia
  • China
  • USA
  • Canada
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • The Middle East
  • India and Pakistan
  • Korea and Japan
  • Latin America
  • Australia
  • The Arctic
  • The future.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Condensed from an adult series, a big-picture overview of how geography has influenced the development of modern nations and international trade. Marshall's fat Prisoners of Geography (2015) and select chapters (on Australia and Canada) from his upcoming Power of Geography (Nov. 2021) have been transformed into a dozen large infographic maps with follow-up commentary. It's all designed to highlight the roles geophysical features, or the lack thereof, have played in shaping trade and politics. Readers will find both broad-brush accounts of historical incidents and themes and closer looks at cases in point. The point, for instance, that ignoring natural borders to lay out arbitrarily drawn ones (like those created in the Middle East after World War I) inevitably leads to long-term states of conflict is convincingly made. The maps themselves, many designed to demonstrate a specific point, are a patchy mix of single countries, whole continents, and general regions like Latin America (depicted as Mexico to Cape Horn). Some visuals, such as an outline of Africa with silhouettes of the U.S., China, and several other large countries fitted within like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, will make a larger impression on young viewers than, for instance, a schematic map of Europe festooned with pie charts showing the percentage of natural gas select countries import from Russia. Human figures are rare, generic, and used largely as decorative elements. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Persuasive, if distinctly rushed and slanted more toward economic than cultural history. (Informational picture book. 8-11) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.