A groundbreaking new perspective on catastrophes
throughout human history, with vital lessons for our future
‘This book upended my understanding of the ancient
world’ Zoë Schlanger, author of The Light Eaters
‘Lizzie Wade is an exceptional journalist and a master
storyteller’ Ed Yong, author of An Immense World
The history of humanity is one of devastating,
once-in-a-thousand-year events: rising seas that make land uninhabitable,
decades-long droughts, civilisational collapse, epidemics like the Black Death
and the Spanish Flu that reduce a city’s population by fifty percent. And yet,
despite enormous destruction and very real tragedy, these catastrophes all
share one common denominator: we survived.
In APOCALYPSE, Lizzie Wade reframes the story of human
history to show how we can learn from these apocalyptic moments, seeing them
not just as violent, world-ending events but as moments of progress and
transformation. We travel back in deep time to when homo sapiens replaced
other human species including the Neanderthals, witness the fall of the kingdom
of Old Egypt, the end of the Mayans and the Black Death, as well as
lesser-known catastrophes.
To weave this unique narrative, Lizzie introduces us
to a new generation of archaeologists using cutting-edge technology to tell new
stories about our deep past, including flying planes equipped with lasers over
Mayan ruins deep in the jungle, scuba diving to the bottom of the ocean, and
sequencing the DNA of ancient people to show how we are far more connected to
our ancestors than we think.
Written in a gripping style that reads like an Indiana Jones
mystery, APOCALYPSE offers a refreshingly optimistic take on the crises our own
generation and those after us will face – arguing that yes, catastrophes are
painful and destructive, but we can and will survive them.