A Short History of Nearly Everything
2003 · Bill Bryson · 544 pages · Popular Science
Bill Bryson set out to understand how we got from nothing to everything, and the result is a 544-page tour through physics, chemistry, geology, biology, and every other field that explains our existence. It's funny, accessible, occasionally awe-inspiring, and has turned more people into casual science enthusiasts than most textbooks could ever hope to. Some sections show their age, and specialists will find oversimplifications. But as a gateway to caring about how the universe works, it remains one of the best books ever written for a general audience.