Only a handful of recent books on archaeology of the African countries have reached my doorstep to date; luckily, what there is is choice.
1. African Archaeology
David W. Phillipson's 2005 edition (the third) of African Archaeology has become a well-thumbed staple of my nearest bookshelf. Covering everything from paleontology and well into the 20th century, African Archaeology also includes a big fat bibliography and a great index, something every interested generalist needs.
2. Digging through Darkness
South African archaeologist Carmel Schrire's inventive personal memoir, subtitled, "Chronicles of an Archaeologist."3. The First Human: The Race to Discover Our Earliest Ancestors
I thoroughly enjoyed science writer Ann Gibbon's The First Human, even if the pettiness of the scholars made me cringe. Some might say it would have been better to have left all the heat out: but it is clear that the heat--the competition to find the earliest human ancestor--is what drives the search for the origins of human kind. This fascinating look into the men and women of the search for the earliest human ancestor is well worth investigating on your own.




