End is Always Near

Apocalyptic Moments from the Bronze Age Collapseto Nuclear Near Misses

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Dan Carlin: End is Always Near (2019, HarperCollins Publishers Limited)

288 pages

English language

Published Sept. 18, 2019 by HarperCollins Publishers Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-00-834093-3
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4 stars (7 reviews)

4 editions

Review of 'End Is Always Near' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Pandemics. Nuclear war. Perhaps January 2021, with four thousand people dying of COVID each day and an increasingly panicked psychopath-terrorist still at large in the White House, might not have been altogether the best time to read a book about how/why societies collapse? Then again, Carlin's point is that this is nothing new: human societies have been collapsing for, oh, pretty much as long as we've had societies. There are a few which haven't -- yet -- but thinking that we're special is just an embarrassing cognitive bias. This too shall pass, maybe even within our lifetimes. Maybe this week. Collapses are more easily seen in the rear-view mirror.

Have I discouraged you from reading it? I hope not: this was a fun book. It's actually kind of lighthearted, if you're self-aware enough to appreciate the preciousness of our moments while also contemplating mortality. It's well organized, informative, and thought-provoking. …

Review of 'End Is Always Near' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Dan is known for his amazing podcast: Hardcore History, so I choose the audiobook version of his book to hear him read it himself. The book is amazing and hops history from apocalypse to apocalypse showing that we as humans are very good at fucking ourselves over. This is very comforting with view of climate change and another big world war coming up between USA and China.

In the book, Dan also asks questions like: what is toughness, and which generation is the toughest. As a softy raised in a too comfy place I know it's not me, and I don't really care.
I just care to know that we as a species haven't changed much and probably never will. We will fuck ourselves over again and again. Civilisation will fall. But it's alright. It's all part of history.

Review of 'End is Always Near' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I feel terrible giving this rating, being that it’s probably a 3.5, but it’s not a 4.

Anyway, aside from the last two chapters, this was a great easy reader and introduction to the history of some of the great challenges to civilisation over the millennia. And Carlin’s conversational style translates easily into print to make it so accessible.

And in a way, that’s the problem. In writing, despite the many references, it comes across as too much supposition. And then there’s the footnotes. So. Many. Footnotes. Which in the narrative style of a podcast work okay as little asides, but become distracting - especially in the destroyer of worlds essay.

Maybe they would’ve been less disruptive in the audiobook...but then, why wouldn’t you just listen to the podcast?

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Subjects

  • Civilization, history
  • World history