Member Reviews
Due to a sudden, unexpected passing in the family a few years ago and another more recently and my subsequent (mental) health issues stemming from that, I was unable to download this book in time to review it before it was archived as I did not visit this site for several years after the bereavements. This meant I didn't read or venture onto netgalley for years as not only did it remind me of that person as they shared my passion for reading, but I also struggled to maintain interest in anything due to overwhelming depression. I was therefore unable to download this title in time and so I couldn't give a review as it wasn't successfully acquired before it was archived. The second issue that has happened with some of my other books is that I had them downloaded to one particular device and said device is now defunct, so I have no access to those books anymore, sadly.
This means I can't leave an accurate reflection of my feelings towards the book as I am unable to read it now and so I am leaving a message of explanation instead. I am now back to reading and reviewing full time as once considerable time had passed I have found that books have been helping me significantly in terms of my mindset and mental health - this was after having no interest in anything for quite a number of years after the passings. Anything requested and approved will be read and a review written and posted to Amazon (where I am a Hall of Famer & Top Reviewer), Goodreads (where I have several thousand friends and the same amount who follow my reviews) and Waterstones (or Barnes & Noble if the publisher is American based). Thank you for the opportunity and apologies for the inconvenience.
*received from netgalley for honest review* Amazing book, great for kids to look at and read on their own but also great to read with them. Has a lot more information than expected and great art,
Of course this is a book aimed at children, but I would call this an amazing resource for everyone interested in the human evolution.
The illustrations are beautiful and really help you understand the information given.
This book is full of interesting information and, although I don't have the knowledge to check whether it is actually complete, it felt very complete. All of the Latin names are given and so this would be a great starting point for further research if your child (or you, yourself) would want to dig deeper.
This book is all about the beginning of man. Each double page spread details a different group of early people telling about their life and how they survived as well as how they differed from other groups. There are short pieces of text interspersed with warm, inviting art work. The kids and teachers at my Montessori school are going to love this one!
This book is a great introduction to human advancements from the beginning of humankind. In brief detail the book explains about how humans evolved, talking about Homo Erectus, Neanderthals, etc. This book touches on the introduction of farming, how humans used to hunt, and many other fascinating facts. This is a great middle grade book and my 3-5 graders will be fascinated.
This is a wonderful book. Everyone should read it on coffee table or otherwise. As simple as that.
This book is about us and describes in a adorable way ; how we have changed over centuries.
Illustrations are wonderful and cohesive with printed story. Artwork makes book highly readable and enjoyable.
Captions are crisp, informative and interesting.
Human story starts from time when early pre human mammals started standing on feed and shifted eyes from side to front of the face.
Story of Neanderthal who became extinct due to modern humans is very interesting. So are various historical artifects surviving the test of time.
Every major details in our evolution is delineated with mesmerizing precision.
It is a book perfect for a gift to curious teenagers and intelligent grown ups.
At end it also underlines the fact that due to absence of natural predators we may be becoming weaker beings with smaller brains.
Thanks netgalley and publisher for review copy.
I got this as a book to read with my 7 year old daughter. It was a bit to verbose for her but I could see it being a good read for a tween.
I requested this book with the how that I could read it together with my 8 year old daughter. Upon receiving the book, I decided to read it first myself and then selectively read it with her. Some of the scientific language will be above her level, but the content and information is really worth attempting to share it with her.
I learned a lot reading this book and really enjoyed it. For. A children’s scientific text, the few of information was really good and presenting in an interesting and attractive way. The illustrating were well done and added greatly to the text provided.
This is a great text detailing in chronological order the evolution of mankind, with is absolutly fascinating! This book has lit a fire in me and really inspired me to delve deeper into this topic. Great book.
When We Became Humans, Our incredible evolutionary journey by Michael Bright was released June 16, 2019.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from Quarto Publishing Group through NetGalley. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
#WhenWeBecameHumans #NetGalley
This book uses both graphics and description to explain how humans came in to being. It is set out in chapters which would enable specific topic study. The language is suitable for KS2 students, and is brought to life by the colourful illustrations throughout
When We Became Humans: Our Incredible Evolutionary Journey, written by Michael Bright and illustrated by Hannah Bailey, is a children's nonfiction book. This large-format book guides readers through the key aspects of the human story, from the anatomical changes that allowed us to walk upright and increased brain size in our ancestors, to the social, cultural, and economic developments of our more recent cousins and our own species. Along the way, focus spreads take a closer look at some of the key species in our history, from the ancient Australopithecus Afarensis, 'Lucy', to our recent cousins the Neanderthals and ourselves, Homo sapiens.Looking beyond the anatomical evolution of humans, this book explores how our culture and way of living has evolved, from how trails of cowry shells reveal early trade between tribes, to how and why humans first domesticated dogs, horses, and farm animals, and began settling in permanent villages and cities. Through digestible information and absorbing illustration, young readers will be given an insight into their own origins, and what it really means to be a human.
When We Became Humans does a wonderful job of explaining and illustrating important anthropological and archaeological terms to readers. The information about the evolution of man is well chronicled here- with just about every aspect of out past and present understanding of it well covered. I found the text to be clear and well written, and the illustrations do a good job of adding detail and capturing the interest and imagination of readers. I thought I had a good understanding of the topic, but found this book to be extremely informative and accessible. I think that this is a book that readers will enjoy looking at on their own, and in an educational context. I really liked the included charts and text about science fiction or fact, and the thoughts about the future. It was well done all around.
When We Became Humans is a well organized and researched book that will appeal to interested readers and those reading for projects and
I received a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. Thank you NetGalley!
awesome kids book.
we loved the illustrations.
the story was unique & easy to read!
This is an expertly presented reference book that takes a look at the geographical and biological history of humans.
This is a perfect book to inspire and educate young ones.
I was given this book for free from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
I was really anticipating this book, because I find it hard to find gorgeously illustrated books for children that are also secular in nature when it comes to the story of human evolution.
I liked how the information was laid out and my four year-old son really appreciated the illustrations. However, I'm not sure if this is an ARC or a finished version of the book, and the thing that really kept me from enjoying it was the numerous spelling and word tense errors. To be such a short book, it is littered with them. I liked the index but I also wish that the book contained citations of some sort, or at the very least told us who the scientists were that some quotes were taken from.
It's a good idea and good research, but there's room for improvement in the delivery.
Erratum:
On the introductory page What's a Human?' - in the section on hominins, the text reads, "Humans and are closest relatives are called hominins" I suspect it should read, 'our' closest relatives.
Written well by Bright and illustrated nicely by Bailey, this book tells of the evolution of humans over 65 million years - and yes, that's when the first mammals date back to! People often say that it was only the destruction of the dinosaurs in the penultimate extinction event (we're going through the ultimate one right now) that 'allowed' mammals to evolve to become today's dominant class of living things (aside from bacteria and viruses, that is. And beetles! LOL!).
I'm not sure I buy that. Dinosaurs, in one form or another date back to some quarter billion years ago, and they didn't start to become dominant themselves until a major extinction event from which they profited, in much the same way we profited. But could mammals have become dominant if Dinosaurs had not died out? I think they could, but there isn't any way to really know! perhaps a more interesting questions is: would humans ever have evolved if dinosaurs had not died out?
This books isn't about speculation though - it's about what actually happened as testified to by the abundant evidence we have for primate and human evolution from fossils, from genetics, and from other sources. This books starts tracing that lineage from the earliest mammals such as Purgatorius (sounds like a Roman gladiator, right?!) to Archicebus, to Aegyptopithecus. Here's a tip - any complicated fossil name like that which ends in 'pithecus' - that means it was some sort of ape or monkey. This one - the fossil of it, that is, was first found in Egypt, hence the start of the name.
A couple of others were Proconsul and Pierolapithecus. Yeah - not all names follow the same rules! Proconsul was a monkey but it cheated a bit because there was an ape in London zoo when it was discovered, that was named Consul, so this was named to indicate it came earlier than modern apes. Duhh!
In language suitable for younger children, the book explains clearly not only what we know, but how we know what we know. Evidence from anatomy, from old DNA, from comparing skeletons, and even from studying modern DNA and how modern organisms are related, can reveal a lot, when you know what you're looking for and have a competent scientific understanding. Those without such an education will draw false conclusions and even make things up. Those people are not scientists, and don't know what they're talking about. Stick with a solid 150 or so years of evolutionary science, a steadily mounting trail of reliable evidence, and a solid track record, and you won't go wrong!
Next up comes the earliest precursors of modern humans such as Australopithecus - there it is again. You now know the pithecus part, but what of the Australo-? Well, what sounds like that? Australia! That doesn't mean it was found in Australia, but that word - that prefix, means of the south. Australia's in the south and this specimen was found in the south - but of Africa. Ah you ask, so why isn't it called Africanus? Well, there is actually one called Africanus! Can't use the same name twice!
The names kept on coming. At one point there was almost no fossil evidence for human evolution; now, scientists are finding it regularly as they learn more about where to look. The book discusses these findings, including what these primitive people ate (and yes, by this point they were more like people than like apes), where they lived, and how they worked with tools.
The scientist sho study these things have found evidence of rock shelters where primitive humans lived the fires they made, and the tools they created. They even named one species 'handyman' - Homo for 'human' and 'habilis' for handy - that is, they were good with their hands. The name is often shortened to H. habilis - the first part always with a capital letter, the second part always lower case. They weren't handy because they lived close by and could come over and fix something for you at short notice! Once the 'H's started showing up, many more were found and this book does a great job of laying out the story, and illustrating how they might have looked - remember we have only the skeletons, so we have to kind of guess how they looked, and one guess is as good as another!
H. heildebergensis and the Neanderthals are discussed next, the mysterious Denisovans, and even the 'hobbit' people - H. floresiensis! But you know what? All of these have disappeared, leaving humans: H. sapiens, as the sole surviving member of our genus (the genus is the first bit, the H, the species is the second bit, the sapiens. If there's a third bit, its a sub-species. All modern humans, no matter whether they look exactly like you or a bit different, no matter what country they live in or what they wear or believe, or eat or do everyday, are this same species. There's a chart toward the end of the book laying out all of these human and near-human species.
The book discusses how this all began in Africa, how the giant mammals of the world died out, and how humans spread from Africa to occupy every content on the planet - the most wide-spread single species there is. Maybe apart from rats. And mice. And bacteria. And viruses! I guess that's quite a few of us, huh?! There's a nice map showing how humans spread across the globe near the end of the book.
We went on - as the book makes clear, to refine our tools, to invent the wheel, to invent glue to hold weapons together to go hunting and to protect ourselves, to beginning agriculture, to domesticating animals - including the wolf which we now keep as dogs - and to inventing video games. Wow! Actually the book doesn't say that last bit - I added it myself. Bu we learned how to make things and then trade them with other communities to get other stuff that we couldn't find or make. Then came trade tariffs. Actually, I added that bit as well!
We went far beyond that over time to grow into and create the complicated world humans inhabit now. The book discusses healthcare, jewelry, art, and monument building, and then writing came along, of course, so we could record everything we did in order to benefit future generations - and this book is one of those results! I commend it as a fun, interesting, educational, and very worthy read.
This is a very informative, well-illustrated book that goes into details about human evolution. At 64 pages, it is big enough to give an impressive amount of information while staying relatively easy to read. The text is large and presented in multiple blurbs on each spread, with lots of illustrations and maps. The facts are interesting and it covers a huge range of topics about how scientists know what they know, how humans evolved, moved, adapted and lived in all different ages, and even what the future looks like.
The one drawback is that it doesn't explain to kids how evolution really works. There are a lot of misconceptions about evolution and any good book on the subject really should have a basic lesson on what evolution does and doesn't mean.
That tiny note aside, this is a really well done book that would be especially great for homeschoolers and school libraries.
My rating system:
1 = hated it
2 = it was okay
3 = liked it
4 = really liked it
5 = love it, plan to purchase, and/or would buy it again if it was lost
I read a digital ARC of the book for the purpose of review.
It’s in our nature to want to know who we are and where we came from. When We Became Humans is a really great book all about us. Asking and answering questions about our beginnings, evolution and where we go from here. This book is absolutely filled with interesting information and colourful drawings.
A very good book, and one for strong consideration by any school librarian or home schooler. It looks at first like a pictorial book with bitty paragraphs dotted around the pages and spreads, but the writing is actually more engaging, and the text comes in fully-formed paragraphs as opposed to sentences and factoids. That way we really do get the chance to learn all I think we'd need to know about our ancestry – the early ape-like species and so on that form our family tree. But every aspect of life that might be known about to make a modern woman is here, too – what she ate, how she decorated her clothes, and when she moved into cities and gained specialised jobs, alongside the domestic animals and currencies that had had to start about the same time. It will often surprise you how far back all that happened – and there are of course the many known unknowns relating to our prehistory waiting for us to discover them. None of that takes away from the art, which doesn't need all the lurid colouring of some school books, and is all the better for it. Tutors will like as not need to give the class a crash course in negative numbering, counting backwards into the distant past and the scale this story plays out on, but after that the subject of anthropology is ready for any pupil. Wonderful.
I have to admit, I was genuinely surprised at the level of information included in Michael Bright's<i> When We Became Humans</i>, which is illustrated by Hannah Bailey. I think, going in, I expected this book to be very introductory in terms of the evolution of humans, something meant to bring children into the beginning steps of what our beginnings and our journey actually looked like. What I got, however, was an incredibly thorough account of the transformation humans went through over the years. And it was impressive.
With that said, I do see this is a book that is more geared to the kids who are just moving into their teenage years. Children, anywhere between 10 years of age to 13 or 14, would be much more ideal readers for this book than I'd originally expected. I think it's great that this book provides such an amazing educational opportunity. A dense and enjoyable read, <i>When We Became Humans</i> does a fantastic job of detailing important facts about evolution and the experiences of humans from the past. Filled with exceptional illustrations and informative text, this is a great book to have on your shelf.
I'm really glad I had the chance to read it. And I think this book holds a lot of benefit for many, many others. It's the kind of book I'd love to see in a library. Even more, I'd love to see it in my own school. With the wealth of information it offers for children, it's well worth picking up for the kids that you know, even if they need to grow into it.
<i>I was provided a free copy of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.</i>
This book is a perfect introduction to the concept of human evolution. There is a lot of information on each time period, and some human ancestors that are not usually discussed in other books for children. The illustrations are very well done, and will definitely enhance the reading experience for children. In a homeschool setting, this will be an especially valuable resource. Secular homeschool families (those who homeschool for non-religious reasons) look for history books that discuss evolution and they are not always easy to find. This will be a wonderful addition to our prehistory studies with lots of information that will make a great jumping off point for further studies.
As an aside, as an adult, there was a lot of new and interesting information included. I found myself sharing this information with other adults who were equally as surprised. This makes a wonderful resource because parents/teachers can learn and be excited right along with their children/students.
I received an electronic ARC from Quarto Publishing Group through NetGalley.
Well presented information on the the history of evolving humans. Bright takes middle grade readers through the centuries and explains the various skills that developed for survival. The illustrations support the text and help readers envision how the species looked.
Terrific STEM resource.