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Steven Johnson argues with verve and conviction in his thoroughly engrossing Enemy of All Mankind ... Because Enemy of All Mankind offers, among its many pleasures, a solid mystery story, it would be wrong to reveal the outcome. But it s surprising. So, too, are the many larger themes that Mr. Johnson persuasively draws from his seaborne marauders...All the author s more surprising suppositions are not merely stapled onto the narrative but seem to have grown there effortlessly during the course of a spirited, suspenseful, economically told tale whose significance is manifest and whose pace never flags. The Wall Street Journal
... [a] page-turner of a book ... we can thank Johnson for combing the archives, describing in vivid detail the life of pirates that we thought we knew most likely through motion pictures when in truth we didn t ... Enemy of all Mankind covers lots of territory, including the beginnings of the British Empire, and it s a good read, made all the better by Johnson s clever storytelling and an unforgettable pirate named Henry Every. The Washington Post
It is the perfect book to cozy up to during a pandemic. . . . In addition to providing captivating yo ho ho and a bottle of rum action, the author examines the geopolitical and cultural implications of Every s spasm of violence. His subject changed the very nature and geography of piracy in the eighteenth century. USA Today
Enough adventures to fill a Netflix series . . . [Johnson] skillfully makes sweeping historical points from bloody swashbuckling details. Star Tribune
... entertaining and erudite ... Johnson's lucid prose and sophisticated analysis brings these events to vibrant life. This thoroughly enjoyable history reveals how a single act can reverberate across centuries. Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Johnson is one of those polymath writers who links events and subjects most of us wouldn t see as related, always to enlightening effect ... intriguing...relevant to our own world. Johnson doesn t just write about the heyday of piracy; he connects it to the growth of nation-states, the history of the first multinational corporation, the origins of democracy and the birth of the tabloid media, among other things ... an amazing story, but the real one Johnson tells in Enemy of All Mankind is even more so. The Tampa Bay Times
Johnson weaves a tapestry of treasure, tribunals, emperors, atrocities, and a pirate s life at sea ... Consummate popular history: fast-paced, intelligent, and entertaining. Library Journal








