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Reviews for Historical Perspectives on Puerto Rican Survival in the United States

 Historical Perspectives on Puerto Rican Survival in the United States magazine reviews

The average rating for Historical Perspectives on Puerto Rican Survival in the United States based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-03-12 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Uytfuiy Uyi
Good points I hadn't thought about before: 1) the Indo-Europeans all practiced cremation, so the latter Zoroastrian practice of "sky-burial" was probably taken from the indigenous, or previous, inhabitants of Central Asia who were there when they arrived. 2) Early Kyrgyz may actually have been Indo-Euros who mixed with Turkic speakers.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-02-14 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Tom Anderson
With the publication of Dr. Richard Frye's The Heritage of Central Asia from Antiquity to the Turkish Expansion (Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1996, hardcover (ISBN 1558761101 ) and softcover (ISBN 155876111X), 264 pages) at last we have for Central Asia an overview book worth reading by novice and veteran alike. As the title implies, topics in the book include geography, pre-history, Zoroastrianism and Achaemenid Persians, Alexander the Great and the Greeks, the Parthians, nomads, Kushans, Silk Road trade, Buddhism, Sogdians, Muslims, Turks and much more. There are several (somewhat small) maps and a fair number of illustrations and photographs. Appendix topics include sources, geographical names (always a challenge in Central Asia), rulers in Bukhara and Samarkand, Sogdian deities, languages and coinage. The book is fully-indexed. Professor Frye of Harvard University is one of the deans of the field, especially in the area of Persia and author of numerous books including the recently re-published Bukhara. The very real accomplishment of this book is its comprehensive form which for once does not concentrate solely on a single time or place, but instead successfully communicates a feel for what was happening in all the regions throughout these historical periods. Much is to be learned and many questions will be answered. In some areas of research, of course, due to insufficient sources, the jury is still out and Frye does what one wants him to: he sets up the parameters of the question and the possibilities such that when someday new finds are made, the reader can judge them in the proper context. When he speculates, he informs the reader that that is what he is doing and refrains from offering theories without evidence as if they were fact. The conjectures too, as well as the facts, are always interesting coming as they do from a researcher of this stature and experience. Dr. Frye, who met the famous Sir Aurel Stein, first of the Foreign Devils of the Silk Road, and by extension his work, is a link back to the earliest Silk Road research and forward to what may be revealed by future excavations of mummies in Xinjiang and in the newly-independent republics of Central Asia. This book will be a valuable and often-consulted volume in the library of anyone with a passion for the Silk Road.


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