I am afraid readers are stuck with more reviews today as reading remains the main pain free activity; its not as bad as it was thankfully but a long way to go...or so it feels.
This is an engaging look into a fascinating slice of medieval Iberian history. The Fall of Moorish Seville 1023–1091 focuses on the rise and collapse of the Abbasid dynasty during the taifa period, becoming the most powerful of the taifa kingdoms under the Abbasid dynasty. and it manages to bring political intrigue, cultural achievement, and military tension together in a way that feels vivid rather than academic.
One of the author’s strengths is how he humanised the rulers of Seville—especially al-Mu‘tamid. Instead of presenting him as just another medieval king, the author shows him as a poet, a patron of the arts, and ultimately a tragic figure caught between ambition and survival. The political manoeuvring between Christian kingdoms and rival taifas is clearly explained, without drowning the reader in names and dates. Even if like me you are not deeply familiar with eleventh-century Iberia, you won’t feel lost.
The illustrations deserve special mention. They are vivid, bold, colourful, and clearly inspired by historical sources, nor are they stiff or overly stylised. The cover image, for example, shows a warrior in chainmail with a rich cloak and turban, standing in a commanding pose. The details—like the texture of the mail, the layering of fabrics, and the muted battlefield scene in the background—add depth and atmosphere. Inside, the colour plates and other artwork helps anchor the narrative in a tangible world: shields, weapons, clothing, and architectural elements are thoughtfully included. The illustrations do not just decorate the text; they reinforce the cultural blend of Andalusia and broader medieval Mediterranean influences.
The narrative can occasionally feel a bit brisk, but there is a great deal to get through. Some events—particularly the shifting alliances with Christian kingdoms—move quickly, and a reader who enjoys deep military analysis might wish for a bit more tactical detail. But the trade-off is a smooth reading experience that keeps the story moving.
Overall, this is a strong entry in the series and a solid introduction to the taifa period. It balances storytelling and history well, and the illustrations add real value rather than feeling like filler. If you’re interested in medieval Spain or the complex world of al-Andalus, this one is definitely worth your time.
ISBN: 978-1-804518-30-4 193 pages Paperback
Moving on 500 years, this latest addition to Helion’s Century of the Soldier stable is another one of those books from Helion where yet again the British Civil Wars are cut into bite-sized chunks, which is an approach I wholeheartedly endorse and prefer. My initial skim through the book resulted in me being instantly drawn into the untold mysteries of seventeenth-century garrison life. Andrew Abram has produced a genuinely interesting study of a topic that is usually treated as the dull logistical backdrop to the main set-piece battles. Here, the garrisons finally step out from behind their crumbling parapets and take centre stage.
What made the book instantly appealing to me is its sheer breadth. I used to think of the British Civil Wars as a parade of Marston Moors and Nasebys, forgetting that the entire conflict was stitched together by dozens upon dozens of small, half-starving, perpetually under-paid strongpoints. Abram digs into these places with impressive clarity: who served in them, how they lived, how they fought, and—of course—what happened when the locals decided they had had quite enough of maintaining somebody else’s war.
The human detail is where the book really shines, and readers will be perhaps reminded that this aspect of warfare is something I am very interested in. Muster rolls, petitions, and complaints from governors and townsfolk are woven in without ever bogging the narrative down. I got a vivid sense of the dreary daily grind punctuated by sudden bursts of proper danger. Even the inevitable ‘accounts and provisioning’ sections are surprisingly readable and Abram has a knack for showing how the mundane becomes strategically essential.
Visually, it fits right into the Century of the Soldier series—good maps, decent artwork, and enough illustration to keep the pages lively without it feeling like a picture book. It also contains some handy tables and details of some individual regiments. It is also mercifully well-structured, and I have found it possible to dip into individual chapters without losing the thread, which is handy if you are mining it for wargaming inspiration or background flavour for a scenario.
Is it niche? Absolutely. Does it matter? No. It is niche done particularly well: authoritative without being plodding, detailed without drowning you in academic footnotes, and, most importantly, packed with the sort of insight that reminds you the Civil Wars were far more than set-piece field battles. If you have even a passing interest in the period, the series, or the hidden machinery of seventeenth-century warfare, this is a cracking addition to the shelf.
In short, a lively, quietly fascinating study of the real backbone of the wars—those battered, begrimed little garrisons that kept the whole show running. Helion have another winner.
ISBN: 978-1-804518-37-3 222 Pages Paperback.

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