It's out there to be found - surely even in the USA, libraries contain history books about other parts of the world, and even if they don't, Amazon certainly sell such books. And many of the best stories are on the Internet free of charge.
Lots of history is incredibly fascinating, filled with amazing people doing astonishing things. That schools often make history into a list of boring names and dates to memorise is a great shame; it took me until my early twenties to discover that history is not boring at all.
		
		
	 
Oh, for sure.  I tend to blame my lack of knowledge of history to the fact that when I was in school, I found history classes to be unbearably boring because they concentrated so heavily on battles and wars which did not interest me.  I swear the only women I ever heard mentioned, other than their names in passing were Dolly Madison, Martha Washington, Betsy Ross and Carrie Nation.  I found it highly improbable that women did nothing aside from birth and occasionally raise and marry leaders.  
However, I find that my interests don't naturally lead me to read so much history as they do science, specifically biology and literature and art, which has led me to learn what little history I do know.  I realize that I am wrong in this respect, just as my husband is deficient in not wanting to learn a great deal more about biology than he cares to understand.  But we do prod each other along, over the years.
Even more embarrassing and less forgivable to me is the frequency with which I must consult maps, atlases and wiki to figure out most things geographical.  I am an idiot.  But having lived through so much history at this point, I find that I am more interested in it than I was formerly.   I read the bio of Cleopatra, thinking that if anything would stir my passions for history, that would.  I was thoroughly bored with the book and even more disappointed in myself.  Habits acquired in childhood and during school years can be hard to overcome, especially unaided by any natural talent.  
My remark that Americans are particularly ignorant about history not their own and even their own stands: most of us really are.