Andrew Seth Meyer is Professor of History at Brooklyn College and the author of The Dao of the Military: Liu An's Art of War and co-author (with John S. Major, Sarah A. Queen, and Harold D. Roth) of The Huainanzi: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China.
This is a masterful analysis of one of the most transformative periods of Chinese history. Not only is Andrew Meyer an excellent narrator, but very few can tell a story as he does with so much insight into the social and economic conditions and institutional changes of the time, often decoded through very sensitive reading of key historical events. This strength alone makes the book a suitable introduction to early Chinese civilization. In a very impressive way, Meyer offers the most detailed account of Warring States history ever in the English language, one that is rich in thoughtful interpretations of historic dynamics, helped also by analogies from Western culture. A very commendable contribution indeed! * Li Feng, author of Early China: A Social and Cultural History * Andrew Seth Meyer has given us the long-needed one-volume introduction to the Warring States in a European language. He artfully elaborates the crucial social and political developments, incorporating recent archaeological finds, and intertwining this exposition with stories of the political actors and writers who shaped the new institutions. * Mark Edward Lewis, author of The Early Chinese Empires: Qin and Han * Although the Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing stand as towering dynasties of Chinese history, they rest upon the buried foundation of China's earliest dynasties and their struggles. Like an intellectual archaeologist with a lifetime of experience, Andrew Seth Meyer carefully guides us through the layers of this history to highlight the buried treasures and the hidden world that created them. He has produced a monumental work of Asian history with an appended Who's Who of the fascinating personalities who created ancient China on which the modern nation still rests today. This is a classic work of scholarship that is also a good read. * Jack Weatherford, author of Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World * This is a masterful analysis of one of the most transformative periods of Chinese history. Not only is Andrew Meyer an excellent narrator, but very few can tell a story as he does with so much insight into the social and economic conditions and institutional changes of the time, often decoded through very sensitive reading of key historical events. This strength alone makes the book a suitable introduction to early Chinese civilization. In a very impressive way, Meyer offers the most detailed account of Warring States history ever in the English language that is rich of thoughtful interpretations of historic dynamics, helped also by analogies from Western culture. A very commendable contribution indeed! * Li Feng, author of Early China: A Social and Cultural History * Professor Meyer has given us the long-needed one-volume introduction to the Warring States in a European language. He artfully elaborates the crucial social and political developments, incorporating recent archaeological finds, and intertwining this exposition with stories of the political actors and writers who shaped the new institutions. * Mark Edward Lewis, author of The Early Chinese Empires: Qin and Han * Although the Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing stand as towering dynasties of Chinese history, they rest upon the buried foundation of China's earliest dynasties and their struggles. Like an intellectual archaeologist with a lifetime of experience, Andrew Seth Meyer carefully guides us through the layers of this history to highlight the buried treasures and the hidden world that created them. He has produced a monumental work of Asian history with an appended Who's Who of the fascinating personalities who created ancient China on which the modern nation still rests today. This is a classic work of scholarship that is also a good read. * Jack Weatherford, author of Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World *