Not only does Gilion host the European Reading Challenge and TBR 26 in 26 Challenge on her Rose City Reader blog but also Book Beginnings on Friday. While I’m no stranger to her European Reading Challenge, a few years ago I decided to finally participate in Book Beginnings on Friday. After taking last week off I’ve returned with another post.
For Book Beginnings on Friday Gilion asks us to simply “share the opening sentence (or so) of the book you are reading this week, or just a book that caught your fancy and you want to highlight.”
MY BOOK BEGINNING
A stepped pyramid soars almost a hundred feet above the sprawling ruins of the city of Ur, which once sat at the mouth of the Euphrates River in the Sandy expanse of what is now southern Iraq.
Last week I featured David Greene’s 2014 Midnight in Siberia: A Train Journey into the Heart of Russia. Before that it was Jim Dent’s 2007 Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football. This week it’s Moudhy Al-Rashid’s Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History.
If this week’s selection looks familiar it’s because I featured this book last month in one of my Library Loot posts. Believe it or not, I was motivated to borrow Between Two Rivers out of nostalgia. Decades ago I used to buy beat-up old used paperbacks at a bookshop on my way home from work. A number of these happened to be books about ancient history and the adventures of early archeologists. With those fond memories in mind I found this book hard
to resist. Plus, upon closer inspection I learned the author has been a guest on the highly entertaining BBC podcast You’re Dead to Me. With so much of my reading lately devoted to the 20th century a good book on ancient Mesopotamia sounds like a pleasant departure.
Here’s what Amazon has to say about Between Two Rivers.
Thousands of years ago, in a part of the world we now call ancient Mesopotamia, people began writing things down for the very first time.
What they left behind, in a vast region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, preserves leaps in human ingenuity, like the earliest depiction of a wheel and the first approximation of pi. But they also capture breathtakingly intimate, raw, and relatable moments, like a dog’s paw prints as it accidentally stepped into fresh clay, or the imprint of a child’s teeth.
In Between Two Rivers, historian Dr. Moudhy Al-Rashid reveals what these ancient people chose to record about their lives, allowing us to brush hands with them millennia later. We find a lullaby to soothe a baby, instructions for exorcising a ghost, countless receipts for beer, and the messy writing of preschoolers. We meet an enslaved person negotiating their freedom, an astronomer tracing the movement of the planets, a princess who may have created the world’s first museum, and a working mother struggling with “the juggle” in 1900 BCE.

or novels set in Alaska, the Bering Sea and Siberia. Like so many of my intended reading projects it will probably end up being little more than a pipe dream. But maybe 2026 is the year I pull it off.
was in the twilight of his career teaching history at 










different characters you have to pay close attention to what’s going on. But for the most part it’s been a satisfying read, and as soon I’m finished I’ll be posting my impressions for all to read.






Like I wrote in an earlier post after hearing Elyse Graham, the author of 
to report there’s a darn good chance this book will go on to make my year-end list of 









