1. Guns, Germs, and Steel
Jared Diamond · 1997
Jared Diamond's answer to why Europeans conquered the Americas and not the other way around: not intelligence, not culture, but geography -- crops, livestock, and continents shaped like they are.
Diamond wrote this as a biologist and geographer, not a historian, and that outsider’s-eye framing is both the book’s strength (a genuinely novel angle) and the source of most of the specialist pushback (insufficient grounding in the historical particulars he’s explaining). Worth knowing which hat he’s wearing before you treat any single claim as final.
Read it if: you want the classic, Pulitzer-winning answer to why some societies ended up with guns, steel, and immunity to smallpox while others didn't -- geography and environment, not race or culture
Skip it if: you want a book anthropologists and historians broadly still endorse without pushback -- Diamond's environmental-determinism thesis has drawn serious, ongoing academic criticism for oversimplifying and downplaying human agency, similar to the pushback Sapiens gets on this site







