William Rosen, author ofMiracle Cure,The Third Horseman,Justinian's Flea, andThe Most Powerful Idea in the World, was an editor and a publisher at Macmillan, Simon & Schuster, and the Free Press for nearly twenty-five years.
“A kink in Europe’s climate during the fourteenth century
indirectly triggered a seven-year cataclysm that left six million
dead, William Rosen reveals in this rich interweaving of agronomy,
meteorology, economics and history.... Rosen deftly delineates the
backstory and the perfect storm of heavy rains, hard winters,
livestock epidemics, and war leading to the catastrophe.”
--Nature
“Rosen... delights in the minutiae of history, down to the most
fascinating footnotes... Engrossing.... A work that glows from the
author’s relish for his subject.”
--Kirkus
“Rosen (The Most Powerful Idea in the World) argues persuasively
that natural disasters are most catastrophic when humankind’s
actions give them a push. The depredations committed in battle by
Englishmen and Scots were augmented by years of bad weather: the
result was that people died in droves. The interactions Rosen
describes have been studied but are seldom incorporated into
popular history, and the author never overreaches in his
conclusions, providing a well-grounded chronicle.... This book will
appeal foremost to history lovers, but it should also interest
anyone who enjoys a well-documented story.”
--Library Journal
“William Rosen is a good enough writer to hold interest and
maintain the fraught relations between nature and politics as a
running theme. He ends The Third Horseman with a stark
observation: in some ways, global ecology is more precarious
nowadays than it was in the 1300s.”
—Milwaukee Express
“Rosen is a terrific storyteller and engaging stylist; his vigorous
recaps of famous battles and sketches of various colorful
characters will entertain readers not unduly preoccupied by
thematic rigor.... Rosen’s principal goal, however, is not to
horrify us, but to make us think.... While vividly re-creating a
bygone civilization, he invites us to look beyond our significant
but ultimately superficial differences and recognize that we too
live in fragile equilibrium with the natural world whose resources
we recklessly exploit, and that like our medieval forebears we may
well be vulnerable to ‘a sudden shift in the weather.’”
—The Daily Beast
“Rosen is a natural and playful storyteller.”
—The New York Times
“Rosen has a facility for the telling anecdote and the quirky
aside.”
—Bill Gates
“[Rosen] writes what might be called champagne prose: it slips down
quick and easy but carries a punch.”
—The Telegraph (UK)
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