Reviews

Suola: eräs maailmanhistoria by Mark Kurlansky

skampa's review against another edition

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2.5

The information was good and the recipes were fun. The structure was all over the place; I think it went chronologically. 

It would have been stronger if the author had defined which salt he was referring to in the beginning: he sort of lumps all salts together until somewhere in the middle when he finally defines salt. 

Also it ends very abruptly, is there no conclusion?

booksnooksandcooks's review against another edition

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3.0

It’s too much salt, okay. That was just so much info about salt.

timtamsin's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.75

mark_kivimaki's review against another edition

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informative fast-paced

3.25

it's fine. there's a lot of really interesting information in here but it feels just so disorganized, even within the chapters. maybe these sorts of pop history books aren't for me, but it's difficult to parse what argument or takeaway this book is trying to create.

acrickettofillthesilence's review against another edition

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2.0

You know you're a writing tutor when you fantasize about conversing with the author over his organization strategies.No, seriously. I had an entire dialog in my head about it. How did you organize this book? Does each section have a main concept or idea? Does every chapter and/or paragraph help move towards this idea? Can you find any that don't? Let's read through some of these paragraphs together and you can tell me where you think something might be tangential to the main idea.

This book meanders. It shares an interesting perspective on history based on one trading commodity, but sections, paragraphs, and even sentences within paragraphs will go off on a somewhat related topic and then return to the original topic as though it hadn't even left. One memorable example of this: I read a paragraph about the Egyptians making salt that, in the middle, incorporated a sentence about their trade with the Phoenicians, and then the next sentences finished the explanation salt making.

Some might like their nonfiction to take the scenic route to every idea; I discovered through this book that I am not one of those people.

pirate's review against another edition

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informative relaxing medium-paced

4.0

hirvimaki's review against another edition

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4.0

A fascinating look at how salt has shaped our world. Kurlansky has a gift for storytelling.

eamcmahon3's review against another edition

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2.0

Pretty dull

drgnlis's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

3.75

emailkatieinstead's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.5