The crusades have inspired both the very long (Steven Runciman's classic  three-volume history) and, now, the very short, exposition. Paine,  author of Ancient Greece, does an admirable job in condensing this  riveting and often confusing history into just over 130 pages, offering  much more than the book's slim stature might suggest: the macabre end of  Frederick of Barbarossa, whose army dutifully carried his pickled  corpse into the holy land; and the Children's Crusade, whose young  participants could not survive the treachery of their older Christian  brethren (many died or were sold into slavery) before having a chance to  fight the wicked Saracen. This short account lacks the nuance with  which many scholars have treated the subject; readers will find very  little on the manifold causes and the controversies of these holy wars  or of their nachleben, the elaborate mythology and works of art and  propaganda they continue to inspire. (Paine does mention President  Bush's use of "crusade" in a "war on terror" speech.) The book is hurt  by its lack of clear maps and illustrations and by its occasional lapse  into a glib or colloquial style. (Referring to the Templars as "cocky"  seems anachronistic.) That said, this is a perfectly readable and brisk  introduction that should stimulate readers new to the subject.
144 Pages
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