Reading List

Essential Paleoanthropology Books

From Lucy to Sapiens

Twenty books that illuminate the deep history of the human species — from the first Australopithecus footprints to the ancient DNA revolutions of Pääbo, from the contested fossils of Ardi to the provocative revisionism of Graeber and Wengrow. These are the texts that take the longest view of what it means to be human, and why it matters.

Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind

01

Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind

Donald Johanson & Maitland Edey

Johanson's account of discovering AL 288-1 in the Afar desert in 1974 — a 3.2-million-year-old Australopithecus — reads like a scientific thriller. The discovery and the book both transformed how we understand human origins.

Find this book →
Lucy's Legacy

02

Lucy's Legacy

Donald Johanson & Kate Wong

Johanson's update on the Lucy discovery and its implications for understanding hominin evolution over the three decades following the 1974 find. Incorporates new fossil discoveries and genetic evidence that have complicated and enriched the original picture.

Find this book →
Neanderthal Man

03

Neanderthal Man

Svante Pääbo

The memoir of the Nobel Prize-winning geneticist who extracted ancient DNA from Neanderthal bones and discovered that modern humans carry Neanderthal genes — proof that the two species interbred. A thrilling account of a revolution in how we understand our relatives.

Find this book →
Kindred

04

Kindred

Rebecca Wragg Sykes

The most comprehensive and empathetic portrait of Neanderthals ever written — drawing on the full range of archaeological evidence to show that they were sophisticated, culturally complex beings who deserve to be understood on their own terms. A paradigm shift.

Find this book →
Almost Human

05

Almost Human

Lee Berger & John Hawks

The story of the discovery of Homo naledi — a previously unknown hominin found deep in a South African cave system — and the unconventional excavation that brought hundreds of bones to light. Berger recounts a genuine scientific adventure.

Find this book →
Fossil Men

06

Fossil Men

Kermit Pattison

The narrative account of the fifteen-year investigation that produced Ardi, the 4.4-million-year-old Ardipithecus fossil that challenged every assumption about the last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees. Science journalism at its finest.

Find this book →
The Story of the Human Body

07

The Story of the Human Body

Daniel E. Lieberman

Lieberman traces the evolutionary history of the human body — our upright posture, our large brains, our reduced body hair — and argues that many modern diseases are the result of living in environments our bodies were never designed for. Revelatory and practically important.

Find this book →
Exercised

08

Exercised

Daniel E. Lieberman

Lieberman challenges the fitness industry's assumptions by asking what evolutionary biology tells us about how human bodies are actually adapted to move. The answer — that rest is as natural as activity, and that exercise is a cultural invention — is both counterintuitive and liberating.

Find this book →
Masters of the Planet

09

Masters of the Planet

Ian Tattersall

Tattersall's survey of the fossil evidence for human evolution focuses on the crucial question of why Homo sapiens alone survived while all other hominins went extinct. His answer involves the emergence of symbolic thinking and language.

Find this book →
Lone Survivors

10

Lone Survivors

Chris Stringer

The Natural History Museum's leading paleoanthropologist presents the evidence for the Out of Africa model of modern human origins — how a small population left Africa around 60,000 years ago and replaced all other human populations. Clear, balanced, and authoritative.

Find this book →
The Third Chimpanzee

11

The Third Chimpanzee

Jared M. Diamond

Diamond's early popular work asks what makes humans different from our closest relatives — finding the answers not in our brains alone but in our sexuality, art, language, and capacity for genocide. A provocative comparative zoology of Homo sapiens.

Find this book →
The Human Advantage

12

The Human Advantage

Suzana Herculano-Houzel

A neuroscientist discovers that the human brain has far more neurons than any other primate — and argues that this advantage came from cooking, which unlocked the caloric energy necessary to grow such a metabolically expensive organ. A genuinely original argument.

Find this book →
The Ape That Understood the Universe

13

The Ape That Understood the Universe

Steve Stewart-Williams

An evolutionary psychologist examines human behavior through the lens of natural selection — covering language, culture, morality, art, and religion as adaptations. The most accessible and comprehensive introduction to evolutionary psychology currently available.

Find this book →
Our Inner Ape

14

Our Inner Ape

Frans de Waal

De Waal contrasts the chimpanzee model of dominance and aggression with the bonobo model of empathy and sexual reconciliation, arguing that humans contain both and that our social behavior is correspondingly ambivalent. Elegant and thought-provoking.

Find this book →
Becoming Human

15

Becoming Human

Ian Tattersall

A concise, beautifully written survey of human evolution from our first bipedal ancestors through the emergence of Homo sapiens. Tattersall writes with the authority of a career spent with the fossils and the skill of a born communicator.

Find this book →
Rethinking Human Evolution

16

Rethinking Human Evolution

Jeffrey H. Schwartz

Schwartz challenges the standard phylogenetic assumptions of paleoanthropology, arguing that the field has been too quick to accept continuity between fossil species. An important critical corrective to mainstream narratives.

Find this book →
Bones of Contention

17

Bones of Contention

Roger Lewin

The political and personal conflicts that have shaped the interpretation of human fossils — from Piltdown to the discovery of Homo habilis. Lewin reveals the surprisingly human dimensions of a discipline devoted to studying ancient humanity.

Find this book →
Sapiens

18

Sapiens

Yuval Noah Harari

Harari's sweeping narrative of human history from the cognitive revolution to the present uses paleoanthropology as its foundation before extending into history and speculation. Controversial among specialists, it is the most widely read book about human evolution of the past decade.

Find this book →
The Dawn of Everything

19

The Dawn of Everything

David Graeber & David Wengrow

Graeber and Wengrow demolish the standard narrative of human social evolution — arguing that early human societies were far more politically sophisticated, experimental, and diverse than the hunter-gatherer cliché suggests. A provocative and profoundly hopeful reinterpretation.

Find this book →
Origins

20

Origins

Lewis Dartnell

Dartnell traces the deep geological and ecological history of the Earth to explain why human civilization arose where and when it did — in the particular landscapes shaped by plate tectonics, ice ages, and ocean currents. An original perspective on our origins.

Find this book →