Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The End is Always Near: Apocalyptic Moments from the Bronze Age Collapse to Nuclear Near Misses
The End is Always Near: Apocalyptic Moments from the Bronze Age Collapse to Nuclear Near Misses | Dan Carlin
11 posts | 9 read | 3 to read
In his first book, the creator of the award-winning podcast Hardcore History looks to some of humanitys most apocalyptic moments to understand the challenges of our future.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
The_Penniless_Author
post image
Pickpick

I've been a fan of Dan Carlin's podcast, Hardcore History, for years, so this was a no-brainer purchase. Much of the material here will be familiar to any regular listeners like myself, but that doesn't make it any less entertaining. The overarching theme is that the relative peace and stability we've been living through for half a century is an anomaly, and that history shows that societal collapse is always much nearer than people realize.

The_Penniless_Author @Milara He does have a bachelor's in History, though as he freely notes on his show he's not a historian (though he's had several renowned historians as guests). Basically, he's an extremely well-read fan of history with a background in radio, which makes his podcast a lot more listenable than most. He's been doing HH since 2006, so it's one of the oldest/best podcasts still around. The length and detail of some of his episodes are remarkable. 4y
rwmg I used to listen to him and my impression was that he is very good and knows his stuff. I would use him to time my exercise walks, so I panicked rather when he had a 5-hour episode on Julius Caesar and stopped listening. 4y
The_Penniless_Author I tend to think of his shows like doctoral dissertations tweaked for the radio. His long-form stuff is actually my favorite. The four-part series about the eastern front in WWII was about 6 or 7 hours, and all of it was fantastic (but yes, too long for a walk, unless you're feeling particularly ambitious 🙂). 4y
Suet624 I listened to a book about the history of the world and it was just war after war after war. 4y
39 likes1 stack add4 comments
review
Twainy
post image
Pickpick

🎧 This was a fascinating and terrifying book. Short & to the point. Recommendation if you enjoy a little bit of history! This was one of the $6 Audible sale books. I listened on the Libby APP but it‘s well worth the $$ ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️3/4

The_Penniless_Author Liked this book as well, and love his Hardcore History podcast. Would recommend if you're interested in exploring some of the topics in the book more in-depth. 4y
Twainy @The_Penniless_Author I agree. I used to listen to his podcast & enjoyed it. This is another treeware book on my wishlist. 4y
19 likes2 stack adds2 comments
quote
GoneFishing

To imagine the twenty-first-century world being hit with a great plague like the great disease pandemics of the past is fantasy, yet it‘s also extremely possible and has happened many times before.

Suet624 Yes, no, maybe. 😂😂😂 5y
23 likes1 comment
quote
keithmalek
post image

review
keithmalek
Pickpick

The chapter on the Roman Empire was kind of boring. Other than that, I found this book to be quite interesting.

quote
keithmalek
post image

quote
keithmalek

Humankind is more than seventy years into an ongoing experiment. The experiment will answer the question of whether we can handle the power of the weapons we've created. Since the weapons aren't ever going to get any weaker, the only way this experiment will ever likely conclude is if we find out that we can't.

quote
keithmalek
post image

quote
keithmalek
post image

Sounds like me.

quote
keithmalek
post image

review
AthenaWins
post image
Pickpick

Really enjoyed this book, though the first half much more than the second. His expertise obviously being much more in 20th century history, he didn't spend a lot of time discussing much earlier disasters. Still a solid book though. Recommend to fans of apocalypse theories and history.