Change & Evolution are fundamental aspects of life, shaping our world and individual paths. Our book list delves into the complexities of change, offering unique perspectives and insights that shed light on the transformative nature of evolution.
Discover fresh viewpoints and practical wisdom through our collection. Ready to embrace change, ignite growth, and navigate evolution with confidence? Start exploring our selection today!
The Selfish Gene is a landmark 1976 work in the field of biology: It puts the gene at the center of the process of evolution and explains how, when this is taken into account, genes must be seen as “selfish.” Author Richard Dawkins then uses this theory of gene selfishness to explain the massive variety of animal behavior observable on Earth.
The Better Angels of Our Nature (2012) takes a close look at the history of violence in human society, explaining both our motivations to use violence on certain occasions and the factors that increasingly restrain us from using it – and how these factors have resulted in massive reductions in violence.
Genome (2006, second edition) takes you on an exciting journey into your own body, exploring the genetic building blocks that make up not only who you are but also all life on earth. You’ll examine the basics of genetics and discover what genes influence, from aging to illness to even your own personality. Importantly, you’ll better understand why the future of healthcare and wellness may be found in the human genome.
Emotions Revealed (2003) puts emotions under the microscope, revealing where they come from and how to recognize them, whether they’re yours or someone else’s. If you’ve ever wanted to know if someone was being dishonest or trying to deceive you with a friendly smile, these are the blinks for you!
The Origin Of Species (1859) is Charles Darwin’s magnum opus. These blinks outline a theory of how traits are selected by nature, where the tremendous diversity of life on earth came from and how animals and plants came to be distributed across the planet.
The Blank Slate (2002) is about the huge role that evolution and genetics play in making us who we are. Steven Pinker makes a strong case against the belief that everyone is born a blank slate and influenced only by their upbringing, arguing instead that biology is a far more important factor in shaping our behaviors and personalities.
The Silk Roads (2015) is a comprehensive history of the world, written with an eye to the networks of trade that shaped it. The networks of trade first established in ancient Persia and later linked with Chinese trade routes created a great network between the East and the West. But these Silk Roads are not relics of the past. They have morphed and changed, and their impact can be felt today, right down to America’s fateful engagement in the region where it all began.
A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived (2016) tells the story of humanity through genetics. These blinks explain how humans evolved, the role that genes played – and continue to play – in our development, and the ways in which our genetic past can shine a light on the present.
The Story of the Human Body (2013) is a fascinating exploration of a story over a million years in the making: the evolution of the human body. Departing from the moment our ancestors first distinguished themselves from their hominid brethren, Daniel Lieberman traces the biological history of humans right down to our office-bound present.
The Moral Animal (1994) delves into the fascinating – and occasionally controversial – field of evolutionary psychology to ask what really motivates human behavior. Drawing on the work of Darwin as well as a wealth of anthropological sources, Robert Wright sheds new light on a range of familiar everyday situations in the animal kingdom and our own societies.
The Body: A Guide for Occupants (2019) is an entertaining and fact-filled account of how we all work. With his trademark wit, Bill Bryson explains the astonishing ways in which our bodies are put together, and what goes on inside them.
The Romanovs (2016) charts the stunning rise and dramatic fall of one of the world’s great dynasties. The Romanov family helmed the Russian empire for three centuries filled with family dramas, power struggles, political upheaval, and opulent spending.
2030 (2020) isn’t a crystal ball – but it might be the next best thing. Drawing on current sociological trends, demographic trajectories, and technological advancements, it paints a convincing picture of the global changes we can expect to see and experience in the coming decade.
The Book of Humans (2018) is an accessible tour of evolutionary history. It illuminates both the many qualities we share with animals and the many others that set us apart. Incorporating the latest scientific discoveries from genetics and archaeology, it provides a thrilling compendium of the rich variety of life on Earth.
Exercised (2020) is a cutting-edge account of physical activity, rest, and human health. Drawing on groundbreaking research in the fields of exercise science, evolutionary theory, and anthropology, it presents a unique account of the human body’s needs and abilities.
Israel (2016) offers a big-picture historical overview of the small but mighty country. From its improbable beginnings to its controversial wars with neighboring Arab states, Israel’s evolution is a story of change, tragedy, and victory.
Arabs (2021) is a deep dive into the 3,000-year history of the people we know as Arabs. It’s an exploration of the forces that gave birth to the idea of Arabs as a group – and the forces that have kept them apart ever since.
The Epigenetics Revolution (2011) is an overview of the cutting-edge field of epigenetics – looking at the various factors that interact with your genes and modify the way they behave in order to make you, you. From mental health to obesity, it examines the fascinating and often unexpected ways that epigenetics can influence our lives and health.
Drunk (2021) is a scientific and historical inquiry into the evolutionary reasons why humans started getting drunk. Drunk examines how inebriation helped our ancestors evolve into creative, communal, cultural beings, and considers whether or not alcohol is an appropriate tool for the modern age.
In the audio version of these blinks, you'll hear "Also Sprach Zarathustra," composed by Richard Strauss, made available under a Creative Commons Attribution license by Kevin MacLeod. Thanks, Kevin!
Hunter Gatherers (2021) explores the mismatch between our evolutionary tendencies and our modern environments. It outlines how seemingly innocuous aspects of contemporary living are harming us, and stifling our true nature and potential.
Why We Eat (Too Much) (2021) illuminates the new science of metabolism. An exploration of how our bodies process the calories we eat into the fuel that keeps our cells running, it demolishes old myths about the value of dieting. When we really understand appetite, it argues, we can finally begin eating healthfully rather than attempting to starve our bodies into submission.
Why The Universe Is the Way It Is (2008) takes you on a cosmic journey from the Big Bang to the mysteries of time, all while exploring the universe's beauty and complexity. With a perfect balance of science and theology, it's a must-read for the curious and contemplative.
Thunderstruck (2006) is the true story of two seemingly unrelated people, an inventor and a murderer. Set in Edwardian England, the lives of the men intersect in one of the most suspenseful criminal cases in history.
How the World Really Works (2022) tackles a paradox at the heart of the modern world: we’ve never had so much information at our fingertips and never known so little about how things actually work. Of course, we can’t be experts in everything. But, Vaclav Smil argues, it’s our duty as citizens to be informed about the basics – the big questions that shape our societies and their futures.
Future Stories: What’s Next? (2022) explains the roots of how we make decisions about the future and illuminates the urgent responsibility on humanity’s shoulders today, with a multidisciplinary approach to time informed by biology, philosophy, and cosmology.
The Evolution of Desire (1994) drew on the largest study of human mating at the time to analyze the evolutionary foundations that lie behind our everyday desires and mating preferences. It was updated with new material in 2016.
On the Origin of Time (2023) guides you through the humbling, stranger-than-fiction theories that the late physicist Stephen Hawking developed in the last two decades of his life. With quantum physics, holograms, and inspiration from Charles Darwin’s evolutionary theory, it reveals what the great scientist came to believe about the origins of the universe.
Anyone familiar with A Brief History of Time
Guns, Germs, and Steel (1997) is a short history of humanity over the last 13,000 years. The question it poses is as simple to state as it is hard to answer: Why did some parts of the world develop advanced technologies while others didn’t? It rejects explanations that rely on assumptions about the relative intelligence of different peoples. Instead, it argues that the divergence of human societies is best explained by natural factors such as climate, biology, and geology.
Quantum Supremacy (2023) makes understanding the facts and theory behind quantum computers accessible and easy to understand for everyone. It traces the history of the modern computer and posits a future in which quantum computing takes on the challenges of humanity that are unsolvable with even the most powerful of modern supercomputers.
Saving Time (2023) takes a deep dive into the complicated concepts surrounding time and the multitude of ways it can be experienced. Combining historical research, philosophical ideas, and social commentary, it offers new approaches to perceiving time that can help us learn to truly live in the present while looking toward a more hopeful future.
The Metamorphosis (1915) is an allegorical novella about what happens when the main character, Gregor Samsa, is transformed into a bug. It grapples with the themes of alienation, the absurdity of life, and the power of change.
When You're Ready, This Is How You Heal (2022) invites you on a profound journey of personal transformation. Explore poignant reflections and empowering insights that inspire you to embrace aspirations, navigate change, overcome limitations, and reclaim your true essence.
Parable of the Sower (1993) is the story of Lauren Olamina, a young woman who lives in a near-future dystopian California. When her home community succumbs to the destructive forces of the world around it, Lauren is forced onto the road in search of a new life. Throughout her journey, she gradually builds a new belief system, as well as kinship with a new community.
The Anthropocene Reviewed (2021) offers a unique collection of essays exploring the human experience in the current geological age known as the Anthropocene. It delves into various aspects of human life and the world, reviewing them on a somewhat satirical five-star scale, blending humor with deep reflection on the complexities and paradoxes of modern human existence.
The Road (2006) is a dystopian thriller following a father-and-son duo fighting to survive in a bleak, post-apocalyptic landscape. Forced to scavenge for food and supplies, threatened by gangs of outlaw survivors, and faced with death and illness, the duo struggle to maintain morality and hope in a world that seems to have lost all humanity.
Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain (2020) is an engaging exploration of the human brain that debunks numerous misconceptions along the way. It explains what brains are actually for, how they develop, what makes them unique, and why they’re often one step ahead of everything you do.
The Coming Wave (2023) is a wake-up call. Artificial intelligence and genetic engineering aren’t just technologies of the future; they’re already here, and remaking the world we live in. More than any transformative technology of the past, they have the ability to make the next decades the best in human history – or the worst. Which path our societies go down is up to us and our ability to think clearly about the risks and rewards ahead of us.
Capital and Ideology (2019) delves into the historical evolution and justification of economic inequality across various societies and ideological systems. It scrutinizes the roles of property relations and educational structures in consolidating wealth and power, concluding with proposals for progressive policies to mitigate prevailing inequalities.
Foundation (1951) looks at the crumbling of a galactic empire from the perspective of the planet Terminus, located on the Empire’s outer edge. Terminus is home to the Foundation, a community formed by a mathematician who could predict the future and the Empire’s inevitable demise. As the Empire crumbles, the Foundation gains increasing influence through a mixture of atomic power, religion, and economic savvy.
Fahrenheit 451 (1953) tells the tale of a near future with fireproof homes, where firemen are now tasked with the job of burning books. It’s a dystopian future, where pleasure is catered to and intellectualism has been all but extinguished. But after a chance encounter with a free spirit, one fireman starts to question the true purpose of his job.
Hyperspace (1994) offers an accessible introduction to string theory, one of the most exciting ideas in modern physics. It also explores some of the implications of the theory, such as the possible existence of wormholes.
The Freedom Writers Diary (1999) chronicles the journey of students at Wilson High School in California and their English teacher. From their freshman year in the fall of 1994 to graduation in the spring of 1998, the teens learned about and stood up to countless social issues, transforming from so-called “unteachable, at-risk students” into the self-dubbed “Freedom Writers.” Their book recounts their collective experiences, struggles, and triumphs.
Midnight’s Children (1981) is the tale of Saleem Sinai, a child born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947 – the exact moment of India’s independence. This biographical and historical coincidence shapes his destiny, connecting him to a thousand other midnight’s children endowed with miraculous powers and intertwining his own fate with that of his nation.
Robinson Crusoe (1719) is a tale of a man who spends 28 years on a remote tropical island near Trinidad. He faces solitude, crafting his survival from his shipwreck’s remains, and encounters cannibals, captives, and mutineers before he is finally rescued.
A City on Mars (2023) explores what would really happen if humans were to settle in space. Would we live up to the great promise of starting life anew on another planet? Or would we mess it all up, as usual? This engaging and funny guide answers every question imaginable about the prospects of space life – from making babies to interplanetary legal systems.
The War of the Worlds (1898) tells the classic story of what happened when a series of mysterious cylinders landed in rural English villages at the end of the nineteenth century. What starts as a curious anomaly becomes a horrific tale of intergalactic invasion that has thrilled readers for over a hundred years.
New Cold Wars (2024) chronicles the United States’ confrontations with Russia and China as they vie for global supremacy. It details the turbulent struggle for military, economic, political, and technological dominance, exploring the pivotal questions of our era – from Ukraine’s battlefield to Taiwan’s tech hubs to the White House Situation Room.
Mind Magic (2024) reframes manifestation as a daily practice, in which directing attention, cultivating an empowering inner dialogue, and using tools like guided meditations and journaling exercises can manifest positive transformations.
Every Living Thing (2024) explores the bitter rivalry between Carl Linnaeus and Georges-Louis de Buffon to catalog every living thing, a competition that gave birth to modern biological science while also planting the seeds of scientific racism. It reveals how historical accidents and political forces ensured that the wrong man’s ideas triumphed, leaving us with Linnaeus’s rigid classification system even though Buffon was right about evolution, extinction, and the interconnected nature of life.
Alien Earths (2024) dives into the groundbreaking research transforming our understanding of the cosmos and the quest to find life beyond Earth. It explores the innovative techniques used to identify life on distant exoplanets, with insights from the latest discoveries. It highlights the most promising alien worlds and the potential for discovering extraterrestrial life.
The Horse (2024) offers a sweeping exploration of how horses have shaped human civilization across millennia. From their evolutionary origins to their roles in warfare, agriculture, and culture, the book explores the profound and often overlooked impact of these majestic animals on the course of human history.
Unstoppable Brain (2024) explores the latest neuroscience to help readers understand how their brains respond to failure and stress, and offers practical strategies to reprogram these responses for lasting behavior change. It focuses primarily on the habenula, a brain region that can inhibit motivation after perceived failure, and provides actionable steps to overcome this built-in internal barrier and achieve personal goals.
Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order (2021) examines the patterns underpinning the rise and fall of past empires – and demonstrates that they can be equally applied to empires today. It explores how our current global dynamics mirror those of past centuries, with the US and China at the forefront, and argues that understanding these dynamics will prepare us for what’s ahead.
The Human Condition (1958) invites you to explore how action, labor, and work shape your life and the world you live in. Through these core activities, you’ll gain a deeper understanding of what freedom truly means, see how your daily choices impact society, and reflect on your role in the ongoing story of human experience.
The Wide Wide Sea (2024) recounts the final expedition of Captain James Cook, the legendary European “first navigator.” His exploration of a vast uncharted sea led to amazing discovery as well as tragedy. It encapsulates the thrills of scientific advancement while also revealing the perils of colonization.
How Economics Explains the World (2024) offers a sweeping narrative of human history through the lens of economic forces – from the agricultural revolution to the age of artificial intelligence. This concise yet comprehensive work illuminates how ingenuity, market dynamics, and the pursuit of progress have profoundly shaped our past and present, while also examining the economic challenges that will define our future.
Nexus (2024) explores how information networks, from storytelling and books to the internet and AI, have shaped human history. It lays bare the risks technology currently poses to these networks and defines the critical decisions humanity must make to safeguard information, power, order, and truth.
Freiheit (2024) is the autobiography of former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, which she wrote three years after leaving office. In it, Merkel looks back on her life and offers a glimpse into a slice of contemporary events and political history.
Change Anything (2011) presents a comprehensive approach to improving your life both at work and beyond, emphasizing the power of subtle influences over traditional willpower. It explores why common efforts often fail and demonstrates how you can harness influential forces to achieve meaningful and lasting change. It encourages you to rethink your behavior and adopt strategies that will lead to consistent success.
Supremacy (2024) takes you inside the high-stakes race to build Artificial General Intelligence. From groundbreaking innovations to the hidden dangers of AI monopolies, you can see how the quest for smarter machines can reshape the world – for better or worse. It raises the important question, are we on the verge of a technological utopia, or heading toward a future full of unforeseen risks?
Why Taiwan Matters (2023) explores how Taiwan became the thriving democracy and semiconductor powerhouse it is today, while explaining its precarious position at the center of US-China tensions. It examines how Taiwan’s 23 million people manage their complex relationship with China that increasingly threatens to forcibly reclaim the island – potentially triggering a global conflict.
Kaput (2024) dismantles the myth of invincibility surrounding Europe’s economic powerhouse. You’ll discover how decades of collusion between industry and politics left the nation vulnerable to energy shocks, digital stagnation, and dependence on authoritarian regimes. This is a sharp wake-up call for anyone invested in where Germany – and by extension, Europe – is headed next.
The Habsburgs (2020) chronicles the remarkable six-century rise of a dynasty that grew from humble Swiss beginnings into the world’s first truly global empire – not through battlefield victories, but by strategic marriages. Through meticulous historical analysis, it reveals how the same intermarriage practices that built Habsburg power ultimately contributed to their biological and political decline, leaving an indelible mark on European art, culture, and geopolitics that continues to shape our world today.
The French Revolution (1837) is a seminal work that presents the revolutionary period as a series of dramatic episodes told in vivid, often chaotic prose. Through its unconventional style and prophetic tone, it established a new approach to historical writing that emphasized the spiritual and symbolic dimensions of political upheaval, rather than merely documenting events.
Power and Progress (2023) examines how technological advancements have shaped economic outcomes over the past millennium, often benefiting elites while leaving many behind. It argues that the distribution of power determines whether innovation leads to shared prosperity or deepening inequality. By analyzing both historical and modern examples, it highlights the need for deliberate choices to ensure technology serves the broader public good.
The Rights of Man (1791) is a defense of liberty, equality, and just governance. It critiques hereditary rule and oppressive systems while advocating for governments that protect natural rights and derive their authority from the consent of the governed.
A History of Iran (2016) is your ultimate guide to the rich and complex history of one of the most enigmatic nations in the Middle East. From ancient Persian empires to today's Islamic republic, this chronicle unravels the fascinating contradictions that define the country’s identity – revealing the backstory of its religion, revolutions, and its current nuclear ambitions.
Strangers and Intimates (2025) traces the evolution of private life from ancient Athens through the Victorian era to our digital present, arguing that privacy is a historical construct rather than a natural right. It examines key transformations including Luther’s development of individual conscience, the Victorian cult of domesticity, and the 1970s feminist movement’s politicization of personal experience.
How We Grow Up (2025) examines modern adolescence in all its beauty and complexity. Blending real-life coming-of-age stories with cutting-edge neuroscience, it reveals how the adolescent brain is wired, why today’s unique pressures challenge developing minds, and how we can better support teens navigating this critical journey.
Iran’s Grand Strategy (2025) takes you inside the mindset of Tehran’s leaders, revealing how decades of calculated resistance have reshaped the Middle East. Drawing on history, geopolitics, and behind-the-scenes insights, it shows how Iran’s mix of proxy warfare and regional alliances have become an effective plan for power. This is the story of how one nation’s determination to outlast its rivals is redefining the balance of power in one of the world’s most volatile regions.
Impasse (2025) confronts the uncomfortable truth that humanity is utterly unprepared for climate catastrophe, despite mounting evidence of extreme weather transforming our planet. Instead of clinging to false optimism and faith in endless progress, it reveals how acknowledging the depth of the crisis might open new paths toward navigating our uncertain future.
The Cybernetic Society (2025) explores how humans and intelligent machines have fused into a single hybrid system that now shapes every aspect of life. It shows how this symbiosis offers both promise and peril, from adaptive “cognitive cities” to autonomous weapons that accelerate conflict. Ultimately, it argues that the future will depend on whether these feedback-driven systems are designed to extend freedom and human potential or to deepen control and dependence.
Shadows at Noon (2023) examines how the promise of independence in South Asia was undermined by the enduring trauma of partition and the contradictions within anti-colonial movements. It traces how religious mobilization against British rule inadvertently deepened communal divisions, creating wounds that continue to shape the subcontinent’s politics, culture, and daily life across three nations.
Stronger (2025) challenges outdated biases against muscle and strength training by highlighting the crucial role of muscles in our health and wellbeing. Through fascinating stories from history to modern research, it reveals how everyone – regardless of age, gender and ability – can benefit from strength training.
From Third World to First (2000) details the improbable story of how a tiny, resource-poor island was transformed into a global economic powerhouse within a single generation. You will discover the unsentimental and pragmatic strategies used to forge a nation out of a divided populace. It is an inside account of the tough, often controversial, decisions required to navigate a perilous world and secure a future for a nation that few believed would survive.
The Intelligence Explosion (2025) explores how the rise of generative AI has tied society to powerful but opaque systems. It warns we’re at a critical inflection point as the race toward a more humanlike AI accelerates amid hype, profit motives, and weak guardrails. It also highlights risks like bias, hallucinations, copyright battles, job loss, and how misaligned goals can still lead to manipulation or disaster – even without “evil” intent.
The Big One (2025) challenges your assumptions about pandemics by revealing that the next global health crisis will be far worse than COVID-19. Through a gripping, scientifically-grounded scenario, it reveals the critical failures of our past response and the essential, practical steps needed to prepare for the inevitable.
Enemies and Neighbors (2017) tells the story of Israel and Palestine, two peoples building nations on the same piece of land and the century of wars, uprisings, and peace deals that have ensued. From the conflicts of the British Mandate to the shattered hopes of the Oslo Accords and beyond, it offers a clear-eyed look at how this relationship has become so volatile and destructive.
What is Intelligence? (2025) repositions AI not as a looming alien mind, but as a natural continuation of life’s long, messy story of evolution, cooperation, and prediction. It weaves together bacteria, brains, cities, and neural networks to show how intelligence emerges wherever systems learn to model themselves and their world. It takes us through the past, present, and future of AI, while describing our place in it.
To Rescue the American Spirit (2025) traces the rise of a political giant who dragged the United States kicking and screaming into the American Century. You’ll discover how Roosevelt’s uncompromising beliefs guided a nation out of its isolation and onto the world stage. By the end, you’ll have seen how character and courage can single-handedly shift the trajectory of a whole nation.
Evergreen (2025) explores the history of a Christmas ritual – putting up a tree. Reflecting on humanity’s long-running relationship with evergreens, it raises questions of belief, tradition, and environmental responsibility.
Shared Wisdom (2025) explores the relationship between technological progress and human nature – and reveals how we can utilize innovations like AI in a way that benefits everyone. Drawing lessons from historic technological milestones and their impact, it shows how smartly used, these gadgets can amplify our collective intelligence and help us solve pressing global challenges.
The American Revolution (2025) expands on the sweeping saga of the American Revolutionary War for independence from the six-part PBS series of the same name. It captures, with considerable detail and rich empathy for the individuals on all sides, the broad international context for the conflict which kick-started more than two centuries of anti-colonial revolutions around the world.
The Breath of the Gods (2025) explores wind as a force that shapes both planetary history and daily human life, from travel and exploration to disasters like hurricanes, wildfires, and storms. It investigates how shifting global wind patterns are intensifying under climate change and examines the tension between wind as a destructive power and as a potential climate savior through renewable energy.
The Watchman’s Rattle (2009) asks the chilling question of what happens when the world we’ve built becomes too complex for the human brain to manage. Drawing on history, neuroscience, and real-world case studies, it reveals why brilliant civilizations stall, why obvious solutions get ignored, and why insight may be humanity’s last evolutionary advantage.
Pragmatism (1907) unpacks a practical approach to philosophy that evaluates ideas based on their real-world consequences and usefulness. It presents pragmatism as a mediating framework between rigid rationalism and pure empiricism, emphasizing truth as something that evolves through experience, human action, and plural perspectives. Ultimately, it argues that truth, meaning, and progress emerge from active human engagement with the world and the possibility of improving it through effort.
Capitalism (2025) chronicles the birth and development of our current economic system, tracing a thousand years of history across six continents. Developing from diverse trading networks spanning Asia, Africa, and Europe, capitalism explosively reshaped the world—with enslaved labor camps serving as a crucial launchpad. This work reveals that what now feels inevitable is actually a recent human creation, one that has never matched the ideal of free markets and whose reach still has limits.
The Medici (2016), examines how one modest family became among the most powerful in Europe through banking innovation, political manipulation, and unprecedented cultural patronage. It explores their role in sponsoring the Italian Renaissance alongside their relationships with artists, scientists, and political figures who shaped Western civilization.
The Secret of Our Success (2015) explores why humans dominate Earth despite being individually weaker and less capable than many other species. It argues that our success stems from cumulative cultural evolution – the ability to learn from others and build on knowledge accumulated across generations. It reveals how this process has shaped not just our societies but our very biology, from our oversized brains to our shrunken guts.
Blank Space (2025) argues that the past twenty-five years have been marked by creative stagnation, resulting in a culture where reboots, viral trends, and profit-driven content thrive and artistic risk-taking is all but nonexistent. Tracing the economic, technological, and social landscape of the 21st century, it analyzes the broader pressures that have flattened contemporary culture.
The Next Renaissance (2025) explores how AI’s ability to deliver limitless cognitive power at near-zero cost will reshape work, health care, education, and finance. It examines the technological and societal thresholds that will determine outcomes, addressing both the promise and the costs.
Authoritarianism (2024) is your guide to non-democratic regimes, whether military, single-party, or personalist political systems. It draws on global examples from Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. You’ll discover how such regimes emerge through coups or democratic breakdown, how they stay in power, and under what conditions they give way to democracy.
The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World (1851) takes us from ancient Athens to the Napoleonic Era, explaining how a handful of conflicts shaped history and set the stage for the modern world. It offers a strong, understandable narrative for European development and the military strategy that changed its trajectory over the years.
The Only Cure (2026), reexamines one of the most controversial figures in the history of science and finds that the case against him was aimed at the wrong target. It argues that while Sigmund Freud's theories were flawed and of their time, the method he built around them remains uniquely equipped to address the kind of suffering that conventional psychiatry fails to cure.
AQ (2026) introduces a new intelligence measure: the Agility Quotient, or AQ. AQ is intelligence for today. High AQ individuals handle change productively, innovate in volatile conditions, and thrive amid uncertainty. In a world where jobs disappear overnight and industries are constantly shifting, a high AQ provides a critical edge.
Football (2026) asks how a sport that looks slow, brutal, and occasionally baffling became America’s most irresistible obsession. Unpacking the strange magic behind the pauses, the hits, and the rituals, it shows us how football shapes a nation’s identity, attention, and the stories it tells itself about winning, losing, and belonging.
The Origins of Victory (2023) explores how military organizations use disruptive innovation to gain decisive advantages during revolutionary shifts in warfare. By analyzing historical case studies – the development of carrier task forces, precision-guided munitions, and more – it identifies the common characteristics of militaries that successfully spot and exploit the next big thing.
The Story of Stories (2026) traces the history of storytelling from primordial fireplaces into the blue glare of our own digital age. We’ve always used stories to make sense of the world, it suggests, but under shifting technological conditions. From folktales to the age of print, radio, and now AI, the medium in which stories are told is as important as the messages they contain.
Mutiny (2026) investigates why millions of university graduates find themselves trapped in service jobs – and how stagnant wages, punishing debt, and corporate cost-cutting pushed this overqualified workforce to their breaking point. Through inside accounts of recent labor uprisings, you’ll see exactly how these frustrated employees weaponized their education to force massive corporations to the negotiating table.
The Coming Storm (2026) draws lessons from years before the First World War and applies them to our current geopolitical landscape. It offers an in-depth analysis of the rivalries and dynamics of the great European powers of the early 20th century, drawing a line between that era and the early 21st century, paying particular attention to the rivalry between the US and China. It offers an explanation of how WWI eventually broke out and suggests how we might avoid another Great Power war.