1. Sapiens
Yuval Noah Harari · 2015
A historian explains how an unremarkable ape came to dominate the planet, through a talent for believing collectively in things that don't physically exist.
Harari’s real skill is compression – distilling 300,000 years into a readable, argument-driven narrative without it collapsing into a dry timeline. Academic historians have pushed back on specific claims since publication, which is worth knowing going in, but the shared-fiction framework has genuinely changed how a lot of readers think about money, borders, and institutions.
Read it if: you want the single most influential big-picture history book of the last decade, spanning cognitive, agricultural, and scientific revolutions in one readable volume
Skip it if: you want rigorous, narrowly-scoped academic history -- Harari writes as a synthesizer covering 300,000 years in one book, which means broad strokes over granular precision by design











