A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived

The Human Story Retold Through Our Gene

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Adam Rutherford: A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived (Hardcover, 2017)

Hardcover, 402 pages

English language

Published Aug. 27, 2017

ISBN:
978-1-61519-404-9
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OCLC Number:
986827763

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4 stars (1 review)

This is a story about you. It is the history of who you are and how you came to be. It is unique to you, as it is to each of the 100 billion modern humans who have ever drawn breath. But it is also our collective story, because in every one of our genomes we each carry the history of our species births, deaths, disease, war, famine, migration, and a lot of sex.

Since scientists first read the human genome in 2001, it has been subject to all sorts of claims, counterclaims, and myths. In fact, as Adam Rutherford explains, our genomes should be read not as instruction manuals, but as epic poems. DNA determines far less than we have been led to believe about us as individuals, but vastly more about us as a species.

In this captivating journey through the expanding landscape of genetics, Adam Rutherford reveals …

7 editions

Review of 'A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Impressive in its scale, varies between serious science and humorous storytelling. I filled in a lot of gaps in my knowledge and learned I need to know even more. The chapter on genes and race is a brilliantly made compelling argument with a hidden deeper comparison I only grasped later (I love when that happens): Rutherford first shows how widely diverse his roots are, how tangled and twisted everyone is in general, makes the case for how genes cluster among groups and how they mostly do not (with language syntax transformations etc), and then later on I realized he was also showing how two people of almost the same roots (Galton & Darwin) are so different.

Subjects

  • Origin
  • Genomics
  • DNA
  • Evolution (Biology)
  • Human genome
  • Human evolution
  • Human beings
  • History