The Mating Mind by Geoffrey Miller

Consciousness, morality, creativity, language, and art: these are the some of the traits that combine to make us human. Scientists have have often explained these qualities as merely a side effect of surplus brain size, but Miller (http://psych.unm.edu/people/directory-profiles/geoffrey-miller.html, and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Miller_(psychologist)) argues that they were sexual attractors, not side effects. The author bases his argument on Darwin’s […]

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Fiction and the Reading Public by Q.D. Leavis

“Fiction and The Reading Public” provoked fierce controversy when first published in 1932, and it has since come to be recognised as a classic in its field. In her fascinating study, Q D Leavis (http://mypages.surrey.ac.uk/eds1cj/qd-leavis-life-and-work.htm#lifeandwork) investigates what has happened to the public taste in the last three centuries and what effect this has had on

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Dead Man’s Time

Prolific crime writer and film producer Peter James (http://www.peterjames.com/, and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_James_(writer)) has been publishing novels since 1981. He has been translated into 36 languages. His 2013 offering is Dead Man’s Time (The ninth book in the Detective Superintendent Roy Grace series). The summary goes as follows: A vicious robbery at a secluded Brighton mansion leaves its elderly

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A Brief History of Mankind by Cyril Aydon

Family history searching is a highly popular pursuit these days. If you’re lucky you might get back two or three hundred years picking out your ancestors. What of the whole human family, though? How far do we go back as Homo Sapiens? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_sapiens) Cyril Aydon presents the story in 400 pages covering 150,000 years. From

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