DEV Community

Auke de Haan
Auke de Haan

Posted on

What to Read After Sapiens: A Reading Order, Not a Pile of Books

I finished Sapiens a few years ago and immediately ran into the problem every reader of that book runs into. The recommendation lists you find are basically a heap of forty titles, all called "big-picture nonfiction." That's not a reading order. That's a stack.

What actually helps is sorting the books by which specific thing in Sapiens grabbed you, and reading the closest match next. So here's the short version of how I'd structure it.

Tier 1: The Closest Reads

These share Harari's exact move: take an enormous span of time, find a single explanatory frame, and let the frame do all the work.

  • Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond. The closest sibling. Geography, not culture, as the explanation for which civilisations dominated. Sapiens would not exist without this book.
  • The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber and David Wengrow. The most thorough critique of Harari to date. Argues that early humans were politically experimental, not stuck in tribal egalitarianism. Pairs uncomfortably with Sapiens.
  • Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari. The direct sequel. Read it second if you accept the framework Sapiens builds.
  • The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker. Sapiens treats declining violence as obvious. Pinker shows the data.

Tier 2: The Science of Being Human

If the question "why do humans do what they do" is what kept you reading, this is the next shelf.

  • Behave by Robert Sapolsky. The clearest single book on the biology of behaviour. Walks from a single action back through seconds, minutes, hours, years and millennia of explanation.
  • The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins. The book Harari is silently arguing with for half of Sapiens. Reads better than its reputation.
  • The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee. A history of the idea of inheritance, from Mendel to CRISPR.
  • The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt. Why thoughtful people on the same data reach opposite political conclusions. The clearest moral-psychology book of the century so far.

Tier 3: Climate, Earth, Civilisation

The agricultural and scientific revolutions chapters in Sapiens are the gateway to a much older argument about climate and complex society.

  • The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert. Pulitzer winner. Humans as the agent of the next mass extinction.
  • Collapse by Jared Diamond. How societies destroy their own ecological base.
  • The Silk Roads by Peter Frankopan. World history with the centre of gravity moved east.
  • A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson. The funniest book on this list.

Tier 4: The Future Sapiens Pointed To

Sapiens ends with biotech and AI. These keep going.

  • The Inevitable by Kevin Kelly. Twelve technological forces.
  • Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom. Put existential AI risk on the modern intellectual map.
  • Nexus by Yuval Noah Harari (2024). Harari's history of information networks, from cuneiform to ChatGPT.

What These Books Cannot Do

A shelf of grand-frame books can leave you with the feeling that you understand history. You don't. You understand a frame. The best follow-up to all of these is a deep, specific history of something small. Pick a city, a war, a generation, a technology, and read 400 pages on just that. The contrast is what turns a reader of big books into someone who reads history.

I wrote the longer ranked version with verified Amazon review counts on Skriuwer: 15 Books Similar to Sapiens, Ranked by Where to Start. For the unsolved-mystery shelf that picks up the cold-case thread some of these readers also reach for, see the best books about unsolved mysteries.

What did you read straight after Sapiens, and did it stick?

Top comments (0)