Hi everyone,
I’m looking for recommendations for engaging, narrative-based ways to learn world history, and I’m struggling to find something that really fits what I’m looking for.
To explain what I mean (and yes, I’m fully aware this comparison may sound slightly ridiculous):
I developed a working knowledge of Greek and Roman mythology thanks to Percy Jackson, not because it was exhaustive or academic, but because it gave me:
• a clear mental map of the mythological world
• recurring characters and relationships (honestly, the fact that it was emotionally engaging really helped)
• a sense of how the system worked, so I could orient myself and recognize references later on.
In other words, it didn’t make me an expert, but it made the subject intuitive, memorable, and navigable.
I’ll be completely honest: I’m very open to children’s or middle-grade books. In my experience, they’re often the best at explaining complex worlds in a clear, memorable way. If that makes me sound a bit simplistic, I’m fine with that — well-written books for younger readers are often the most immersive and the ones that really stick.
Also, I know that jumping from ancient mythology to the entire history of the world is a huge leap, and I’m not expecting a miracle here. Still, I’ve never really found anything that played a similar role for history — so I figured it was worth asking people who care deeply about books and storytelling.
What I’m looking for:
• a strong narrative (story-driven, not just facts)
• clarity and structure (a real overview, not random anecdotes)
• accuracy (written/created by competent authors, historians, educators)
• a guiding voice or recurring perspective (not necessarily one protagonist, but continuity)
• any medium is fine:
• books
• TV series
• YouTube channels
• podcasts
• long-form educational series
What I’m not looking for:
• purely academic textbooks
• slow “atmospheric” historical dramas with no explanatory backbone
• content that assumes I already know the historical framework
• random isolated documentaries without a bigger picture
I’m aware that history is more complex than mythology, and I’m not expecting a perfect one-to-one equivalent. I’m just looking for the closest possible thing: something that makes history stick through narrative and emotional engagement, not memorization.
If you’ve ever thought:
“This is the best way I’ve ever seen history explained in an engaging way”
—I’d love to hear your recommendations.
Thanks in advance!
by alxmncd