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55. Catching Fire: How Cooking Made us Human by Richard Wrangham

I was interested in this when it came out, and then I forgot about it, but then Zuk made reference to it in Paleofantasy, so I grabbed a copy.

It's really short and easy to read, but also extremely well set out and argued.

Wrangham's theory is that regularly cooking food is what caused some of the physiological changes that separate us from apes, and also many of the cultural differences, around about when Homo erectus emerged.

Like I said, really quite convincing. Also he examines what scientific work has been done on exclusively raw-food diets - firstly, all supposed reports of cultures that don't cook their food have been proved to be wrong; and secondly, if you want to lose a lot of weight, stick to a raw food diet. It's pretty much impossible to absorb enough nutrients to stay healthy and functional (the relevant study was done in Germany, so the participants had all the benefits of a modern consumer society and being able to obtain everything they ate with ease). I also did not realise there was quite such extreme raw-food wintnuttery out there.

This is definitely well worthwhile.
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46. Paleofantasy: What Evolution Really Tells us About Sex, Diet and How We Live by Marlene Zuk

Sick of scientific illiterates telling you that we're not "evolved" to live the way we do? This is the book for you.

Full of interesting facts detailing how we are still evolving, we were never "perfectly evolved" to match our environment (and anyway that concept brings one up against the erroneous idea that evolution has a goal or direction), how we have so evolved the ability to digest grain (and that we've been doing it for far longer than most of those "paleo" types would have you believe) and some of us have an undoubted genetic marker allowing us to digest milk. And anyway, humans are a succesful species because we adapt so well to just about everything - so far, the only thing that's definitively a step too far is spending time in zero gravity.

While she's hilariously dismissive of some of the more whack-job stuff she's found online, Zuk engages intelligently with actual scientific research that argues against, say, persistence hunting as an early human feature.

This is an engaging read that I can't recommend highly enough.

47. Unseen by Karin Slaughter

The latest in the Sara Linton/Will Trent detective series. It must have been good because I read it in less than three days, but not a lot sunk in. Way more disposable than the last one, Criminal.

I still love Will, though.

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