Incoming Resources
- The great Arab conquests, how the spread of Islam changed the world we live in, Hugh Kennedy
- Salt, a world history, Mark Kurlansky
- Women of Byzantium, Carolyn L. Connor
- The slave ship, a human history, Marcus Rediker
- The ascent of money, a financial history of the world, Niall Ferguson
- Well-behaved women seldom make history, by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
- Slavery and social death, a comparative study, Orlando Patterson
- The Cambridge world history of food, editors, Kenneth F. Kiple, Kriemhild Coneè Ornelas
- The enemy within, a history of espionage, Terry Crowdy
- Torture and democracy, Darius Rejali
- Food in world history, Jeffrey M. Pilcher
- The Cold War, a new history, John Lewis Gaddis
- Palgrave advances in Byzantine history, edited by Jonathan Harris
- A history of the Arab peoples, Albert Hourani
- Stanley, the impossible life of Africa's greatest explorer, Tim Jeal
- The holocaust in historical context, Steven T. Katz
- Smoke signals, a social history of marijuana : medical, recreational, and scientific, Martin A. Lee
- The Oxford history of Byzantium, edited by Cyril Mango
- Earthquakes in human history, the far-reaching effects of seismic disruptions, Jelle Zeilinga de Boer and Donald Theodore Sanders
- Blue, the history of a color, Michel Pastoureau
- Epic journeys of freedom, runaway slaves of the American Revolution and their global quest for liberty, Cassandra Pybus
- Social movements, 1768-2004, Charles Tilly
- The world of caffeine, the science and culture of the world's most popular drug, Bennett Alan Weinberg, Bonnie K. Bealer
- The Historical encyclopedia of world slavery, Junius P. Rodriguez, general editor
- The fall of Constantinople, 1453
- Understanding the contemporary Middle East, edited by Jillian Schwedler, Deborah J. Gerner
- Coming full circle, an economic history of the Pacific Rim, Eric Jones, Lionel Frost & Colin White
- A splendid exchange, how trade shaped the world, William J. Bernstein
- Byzantine style and civilization, Steven Runciman
- Voyaging in strange seas, the great revolution in science, David Knight