Hardcover: 422 pages
Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 2 edition (May 29, 1992)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0521415322
ISBN-13: 978-0521415323
Product Dimensions: 6 x 1.1 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Best Sellers Rank: #1,711,864 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #472 in Books > History > Ancient Civilizations > Prehistory #1457 in Books > Textbooks > Social Sciences > Archaeology #4381 in Books > History > Historical Study & Educational Resources > Archaeology
This is a wide-ranging summary of the entire prehistory of North, Central, and South America. This book does a good job at giving a broad and general introduction of the entire scope of prehistory for these continents. It is a cheap and relatively solid reference book for at an introductory level for the non-specialist.The text, however, has many drawbacks. It contains very few illustrations and the ones that are in the book are black-and-white line drawings. For a subject like archaeology, maps, pictures of distincitive artifact types, and some just plain visiually appealing pictures are necessary to illustrate points and keep the reader interested. This book is written at a fine general level, but is too dry for most students let alone the general public to enjoy and retain what they've read.The biggest attractions of this book are it's price and the fact that it covers a wide area in time and space and subject matter. However, it does not make a good coffee table book, a fun pleasure reading book, nor a really effective textbook. There are other books that cover subsets of the subject matter extremely well.There are other books that cover the same range and depth as this particular book. One that comes to mind is better illustrated than Fiedel's book and easier to read, but is outdated and outright wrong (whereas Fiedel can be counted on to be more accurate). Likewise, the other books that cover the entiretly of North, Central and South American seem to have some flaw. So, this book is flawed. But so are comparable texts. Picking a book on New World prehistory is somewhat like picking a spouse -- you have to decide which one to go with by looking at which flaws you would rather live with.
Coming at this subject with little knowledge and prepared for the worst I got this. I don't think I could have done better. OK so it's 18 years old and things move on (phytoliths and better radiocarbon dating for example). But I manages to cover EVERYTHING in enough detail that you feel you know where to start looking for more info. The book is academic but, there being no eyewitness accounts, so is the subject matter.But the best part to me is the writing. Prof Fiedel is clear, fluent and does have an opinion. His analyses of such things as the first hunters onto the continent, the rise of population, the first settlements, agriculture, civilisation and trade is clear and a pleasure to read. He is excellent at demolishing standard models for these events by pointing out the cases where they don't work.Yes, the book hasn't got many pictures. Yes the maps are often in the wrong place in the book and sometimes they haven't got all the sites labelled. But you can probably look up the rest on the internet now (something you probably couldn't have done when the book was first published). Seeing as there's nothing else quite like this (why, I don't know), it's a good place to start.
There has been so much new information since this book was written, including significant new information about pre-Clovis people. It was last edited in 1992, making it 18 years out of date, given the fast moving world of American prehistory.Interested in more up to date history? Try The First Americans by Adovasio, or The Settlement of the Americas by Dillehay. There may be newer publications as well, but these two are balanced and extensive. Dillehay's book requires attention and study, but it is worth it.
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