Is this new book a classy bathroom accessory, a thoughtful house-warming gift, a means to impress friends with your erudition, or is it a sneaky strategy to improve the historical literacy of the American public one bathroom visit at a time?
Holy moly, Horatio. It's all that and more This history isn't just informative and often fascinating, it even identifies history that you can apply in the future.
How awesome is that?
This is real history, by the way; the historical content is based on a world history book used in American classrooms for two decades (with updates along the way). Main topics average two to four paragraphs in length, long enough to learn the essentials of a topic and why it's important, but not long enough to get bogged down in lots of unnecessary details.
Covering two topics per day, the reader would acquire a broad, yet comprehensible, overview of world history in three months of visits to the throne room. Why wait to start getting relief and smart at the same time?