Walker: The Wisdom of the Bones
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Alan Walker and Pat Shipman, The Wisdom of the Bones : In Search of Human Origins. New York : Knopf : distributed by Random House, 1996. x + 338 pages, 8 pages of plates, illustrated with maps; includes bibliographic references and index.
Walker is a paleo-anthropologist who has spent much of his professional career researching the ancestors of Homo sapiens. This book, written in 1996, is centered around his discovery of an almost-complete skeleton of an adolescent male of Homo erectus (the species thought to be the "missing link" between humans and our common ancestor with apes).
Thus, Walker’s study of the skeleton drives the book. But interwoven with this are chapters covering the history of the search for the missing link and lots of scientific information. There’s a good balance between the science stuff and the personal stuff--Walker’s own experiences digging in eastern Africa, and various character sketches of other scientists on a similar question. And while the book is full of well-told anecdotes and well-explained science, its greatest strength is that it always keeps the big picture in mind: our fundamental need to know who we are. The result is an erudite, compelling account of the scientific attempt to discover our history.
That being said, every once in awhile it seems like Walker is indulging in score-settling (when discussing how his views differ from other scientists’ theories). Also, towards the last quarter of the book, the scientific details start coming fast and furious. The tone feels a bit different from the rest of book, and for awhile it was a little jolting. These details dropped it from five checkerboards to four, but it’s still well-worth the read. Recommended!
-- Notes by Eva