The author has organized the material to answer approximately sixty-one questions of historical interest about the history of eastern and central Europe. Some of the material is presented out of chronological order, which can be a bit disorienting. However, those who appreciate detail and complexity in maps will find much to appreciate here. These maps provide the reader with a lot of insights and even more questions to ponder and explore the implications of. The author begins his investigation during the late antiquity period as the Roman Empire was approaching collapse. Early maps show the movement of peoples and the political development of the region during the Middle Ages. However, the author has more in mind than just pictures of moving populations or the boundaries of empires, fascinating as these issues may be. Instead, a significant portion of the book is dedicated to economic patterns, the growth of cities, and the religious and ethnolinguistic boundaries of various peoples, which have contributed to a great deal of the complexity and instability associated with the region. As might be expected given the presentist bias of contemporary historiography, over half of the maps cover the time period from 1900 onward.
A reader, at least one who can internalize the book's contents, will gain a great deal of insight into the problems and complexities of history in the region. There are many consequences to the materials presented. One is that the fate and well-being of many small and scattered peoples, including relatively powerful ones like the Magyars and diverse groups such as Jews, Rusyns, and Uniate Catholics, have depended on the behavior of states that have not always had their best interests at heart. The proliferation of states and the enormity of irredentist claims have made Eastern Europe synonymous with insoluble difficulties that often spill over into the wider world. This book also points out the problem of the Sorbs in Germany and the way that external empires have often caused a significant share of the problems through their actions in the central and eastern European regions, whether through forced population transfers or the movement of new peoples and the establishment of political and religious pressures that have frequently made an already complicated area even more so.