I
don’t normally start my reviews with post-reading discussion. I
try to find an interesting point and lead into the book-at-hand’s
premise or idea. But with Yuvel Noah Harari’s 2014 Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind,
I think it’s possible to start with the end, particularly one point
of discussion I ended up having with my wife. It’s now almost two
decades into the 21st century, and scientific research has reached
the point where what was a variety of speculation the past couple
centuries has slowly coalesced into surety in a lot of areas. There
are things we no longer speak about as possible and likely, rather as
understood and accepted facts. Certain details of evolution are
still being investigated or may not be understood perfectly, but as a
general theory it is now the de facto explanation for much of what
has brought life on Earth to how it stands today. Only the
irrational who don’t want it to be true, dismiss it as entirely
false. This blanket of affirmed research is what has allowed Harari
to write the grandest overview of humanity’s history to date.
Beginning
with pre-historic humanity, and working its way through
hunter-gatherer, agricultural, industrial, and scientifically
revolutionized humanity, Sapiens describes our transition through
known time from a bird’s eye view. A fascinating read, Harari
sugar coats nothing. Finding the sweet spot between infotainment and
formal research paper, Harari conveys information in a clear, direct
manner and adds relevant examples and supporting material to color
the proceedings. I daresay one of the reasons the books is so
popular is the lucidity and sustained focus of Harari’s writing.