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Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies Paperback – April 1, 1999

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 13,776 ratings

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"Fascinating.... Lays a foundation for understanding human history."―Bill Gates

In this "artful, informative, and delightful" (William H. McNeill, New York Review of Books) book, Jared Diamond convincingly argues that geographical and environmental factors shaped the modern world. Societies that had had a head start in food production advanced beyond the hunter-gatherer stage, and then developed religion --as well as nasty germs and potent weapons of war --and adventured on sea and land to conquer and decimate preliterate cultures. A major advance in our understanding of human societies, Guns, Germs, and Steel chronicles the way that the modern world came to be and stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize, and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
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4.5 out of 5 stars
13,776 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and compelling. They appreciate the well-researched and convincing arguments. The book explores the domestication of plants and animals, pointing out agricultural advantages in Eurasia. Readers find the ideas interesting and brilliant. Overall, they describe the book as an eye-opener and an entertaining read. However, some feel the writing is repetitive at times.

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918 customers mention "Readability"785 positive133 negative

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They appreciate the author's effective literary technique and clear explanations. The writing is lucid and understandable, making it an excellent product with interesting and useful insights.

"...At that point China was the leading power in the world. It had a great navy, the largest country, gunpowder, advanced technology and far more people..." Read more

"...This is an excellent book that ties together findings in history, archaeology, paleontology, epidemiology, and linguistics in an extremely readable..." Read more

"...While many of the author's arguments are subject to debate, the writing is lucid; it's easy to see why the Pulitzer committee gave Diamon the..." Read more

"...But GGS ultimately proved to be a great read for me, and highly recommended for anyone who wants a keener appreciation of the world we live in today...." Read more

695 customers mention "Enlightened"644 positive51 negative

Customers find the book well-researched and informative. They say it's a convincing academic discourse on human history, with detailed examples. Readers recommend it as a must-read for anyone interested in human history.

"...This book is a testament to following one’s interests and using one’s intellect. I highly recommend it to all readers...." Read more

"_Guns, Germs, and Steel_ by Jared Diamond is one of the most informative, epic, well-written, and fascinating "macrohistory" books I have ever read...." Read more

"[Strong 3.5 stars for its scope and development of the central thesis, but loses points for trying too hard to explain away non-European cultural..." Read more

"...This read is filled with a plethora of well detailed examples which come to show how access, or not, to certain elements leads to the success and..." Read more

60 customers mention "Domestication"55 positive5 negative

Customers find the book informative about the domestication of plants and animals in Eurasia. They appreciate the abundance of suitable plants and animals for domestication, as well as the agricultural advantages like arable lands and mammalian advantages that allowed the Eurasians to domesticate a wide range of animals. The book explores the transition from hunter-gatherers to farming, sharing knowledge, and the spread of agricultural systems. The main takeaway is that the environment is everything to the success of a culture.

"...fertile soil amidst a variety of wild life that were easily domesticated for animal herding and valuable crops that facilitated the development of..." Read more

"...He notes that it was the fertile crescent that harbored the most suitable grains, legumes (or pulses), and domesticable animals...." Read more

"...This allowed the Eurasians to domesticate a wide range of animals. The Americas were left with one, the llama. Australia, none...." Read more

"...The sections I found most compelling dealt with agriculture and animal husbandry--two topics that would have probably induced sleep if covered by..." Read more

45 customers mention "Ideas"40 positive5 negative

Customers find the book's ideas interesting and brilliant. They describe it as an insightful source for new ideas, with a well-crafted synthesis on what causes some societies to dominate others. The book is described as ambitious and exceeds expectations.

"...Thank you. 15. Ambitious book that exceeded my expectations. 16...." Read more

"...the surface and allows us all to start thinking about some amazing stuff. Good job Jared. Keep up the good work." Read more

"...Ultimately, this book is a long and ingenius answer to a single question: "Why is it that you white people developed so much cargo and brougt it to..." Read more

"I really like the ideas behind this book...." Read more

44 customers mention "Interest"31 positive13 negative

Customers find the book engaging and thought-provoking. They appreciate the author's style of writing, which is authoritative yet accessible to non-experts. The book has humor that lightens the subject matter and relieves the reader's burden.

"...These ideas, while clichéd, are still enthralling and Diamond presents them in a very clear and well-written way...." Read more

"...from a scientific approach but also in an interesting and entertaining style. John McBrearty (closet historian) LOL" Read more

"...a broad perspective, this book would seem technical and even boring at some points...." Read more

"...Jared Diamond turns boring subjects into gold. It's easily understood and difficult to put down. Like no other history book I have ever read...." Read more

55 customers mention "Bias"19 positive36 negative

Customers have different views on the book's bias. Some find it an antidote to racism and hubris, avoiding religious or political bias. They say it draws the big picture without cultural cliches, norms, or prejudices, and looks at the motivating factor of religion behind organized military colonisation. Others feel the book has a cultural bias against the observable, with outlandish conclusions and self-opinionated data in its statistics that skew the findings.

"...I also thought the author strove, quite frequently, a bit too hard for political correctness in for example, sounding a bit patronizing to the..." Read more

"...in complicated and trivial factors; on the contrary, he dismantles racially-based theory through analyzing environmental factors in the human history..." Read more

"...as the case with revisionist history, it has its share of one sided and extreme arguments. It is a good book but not great...." Read more

"...Seems narrow-minded in many ways. I was hoping for something much better." Read more

57 customers mention "Repetition"7 positive50 negative

Customers find the book's style repetitive and plodding. They mention that the message becomes repetitive at times, with repetition in descriptions of development in different geographies. The flow of logic is described as jumping around between ideas and topics. Some feel the book goes into too much detail for their taste, reading as a series of lectures.

"...The author tends to repeat himself...." Read more

"...2. It can be repetitive at times but understandably so. 3. Some arguments are more speculative than others. 4...." Read more

"...and his text is extremely easy to follow even though he covers some highly complex concepts...." Read more

"...This section felt incomplete and sketchy...." Read more

39 customers mention "Length"10 positive29 negative

Customers find the book too long and dense. They say some sentences are long and involved, and it should have been written half shorter.

"...An interesting read for sure. I thought that it was a bit lengthy and redundant, such that he could have made some of the content more concise...." Read more

"...My issues with Guns, Germs and Steel are two-fold: first, the book is huge...." Read more

"...This award winning book is 480 pages long and is composed of the following four major parts: 1. From Eden to Cajamarca, 2...." Read more

"...Book little to long and repetitive and conclusion predictable." Read more

Great Book! Excited to read it again!
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I love this book! I read it years ago and loaned it to a friend and never got it back, so I bought it again and will read it this weekend!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2015
    Two decades ago when I served in the Missouri National Guard we had an extended drill weekend at Ft. Leonard Wood for a live fire artillery exercise. This was a three day drill and I remember it clearly because it was the same weekend as Princess Diana’s funeral on September 6, 1997. I had been at the local library the day before we rolled out and saw an interesting book that promised to explain why western civilization had been the one to colonize the New World and rise to ascendency over much of the world for a long period of time. That had always been an interesting question for me and one which many people do not know the answer to. I checked out the book and during some downtime I began to read. To say that the book grabbed my attention is an understatement. I started it on Friday and finished it on Saturday. My whole conception of how history had seen the rise of Western Civilization was fundamentally altered and would never be the same.

    At the time I thought that using Guns, Germs, and Steel as an educational tool would be a great idea. My dream of teaching history had never been realized and in 1997 seemed like it would never happen. However, history is full of strange things and in 2009 I got the chance to return to college and pick up my degrees. I began teaching American History in 2013 and was then asked to teach World Regional Geography for the Spring 2014 semester. They handed me a textbook and said, “Good luck.” As I drove back home I considered how I would teach this course and my mind recalled Jared Diamond and his Pulitzer Prize winning book. To make the story short, I built a course that used the textbook, Diamond’s book, and the National Geographic series based on the book.

    Obviously I take what Diamond said in Guns, Germs, and Steel seriously. I think Diamond did some outstanding work in doing three decades of research and then writing a book which to me is resonates with readers. For many years the idea that Western Civilization was superior to any other form has been the dominant world view. Diamond rejects that completely by saying Western Civilization had advantages that others did not have due to geography, or literally where it was. When you stop and think about it, why were the Europeans so superior to others for so long? Was it their race, their ideals, or what? Diamond said it was because of where they started that they developed into the world spanning civilization we know.

    What advantages did the Europeans have over others? They arrived with technology superior to all others, were better organized, and had the lethal gift of germs which in the Americas killed over half the population and was the biggest reason as to why the Europeans took those lands over. When Diamond explored the germ theory he realized that these germs came from contact with domesticated mammals such as horses, cows, pigs, chickens, sheep, and goats. These same mammals were what enabled Europeans to transport materials as well as have a convenient food supply and a power source such as horses pulling plows.

    This idea works when you look at the Americas and Australia, but not when you look at Africa and Asia. The lethality of germs did not affect the people in those regions like it did the Americas. In fact, some of the diseases in Africa killed the Europeans and prevented them for exploiting Sub-Saharan Africa for centuries. Some of these germs are now known to have come from Asia as well along with domestic animals that came from there. Many of the larger mammals Europe had were also found in Asia. In fact, some of the technology such as gunpowder came from Asia as well. Diamond acknowledged this in his book and sought to explain why Europe was able to expand while Asia did not.

    This is something I really stress in my class and it is something which the book and National Geographic series does not explore as deeply as it should. Diamond saw a decision made in the 15th century by a Chinese emperor as being the decisive event that altered human history. At that point China was the leading power in the world. It had a great navy, the largest country, gunpowder, advanced technology and far more people thanks to its agricultural practices than any other nation at that time. The decision by emperors in China’s Ming dynasty led to China losing its technological advantage over Europe although no one had any idea that this was happening. These decisions or orders are called Haijin.

    Diamond did not explore this in any depth other than to point to it and say that China’s inward looking policies which had existed for centuries were the result of its location, its geography. Its singular form of government used Haijin to build up its power at the expense of expanding China’s culture and boundaries. There is a lot here to work with, but Diamond seems to casually bring it up in the book’s epilogue. Instead he focuses heavily on the Americas where his theory of environmental determinism is the strongest. I think he gets the theory right, but in the case of Asia he needed to go deeper.

    Since Diamond is an ornithologist by education, and his world journey’s focused on New Guinea, I think his point of view was heavily influenced through his contact with hunter-gatherers. His theory is at its weakest in Asia and specifically China. That again reflects his preference for focusing on one type of people versus another. This does not mean his theory is wrong. It just needs expansion and I do not think Diamond will be doing that any time soon. His recent works have dealt with different ideas.

    Even with this glaring problem, I think this book is outstanding. It does answer the question of why Western Civilization dominated the world for the most part. For my geography class it is a wonderful tool. I focus heavily on how man domesticated two grains from the Middle East, wheat and barley, and built Western Civilization upon them. Coupled with the domestication of large mammals, the forerunners of Western Civilization spread through Europe. Geography played a huge role in why it went west and why there are so many differences between East and West on a cultural level. It also explains why there are such huge differences between North Africa and the lands to the south of the Sahara.

    The role of geography in shaping mankind is without a doubt the single underlying reason as to why history occurred like it did. This is really hard for students to understand because they seem to have been taught a much different concept prior to taking a geography course. Only by explaining the human-environment interaction do students begin to realize that geography caused man to make decisions which would reverberate for millennia. The people of the Middle East followed the Tigris and Euphrates rivers northwest into Anatolia and out of the desert. Man’s movement west, north, and south with the crops and animals of the Middle East were shaped by geographical barriers.

    Diamond points out how man overcame these barriers over time. The civilization that was able to do so developed greater technologies than others. He points to both European and Chinese naval developments in this regard. China’s need to continue to build its naval forces was negligible due to a lack of naval enemies while in Europe those enemies were often themselves as nations competed for resources and trade. Since China controlled all of its trade which was mostly internal or land based, its need for a navy was reduced. Europe surged ahead while China languished.

    In my classes I point to the barriers as we explore the world’s regions. I show how these barriers played such big roles. We play a board game by Avalon Hill that helps to illustrate this as well. Diamond’s book plays a big role in my class and so do his theories. I find it really helps students take the principles and ideas from the first part of the class and begin to apply them to the world regions we study. They are able to make the mental leap to the realization that the people of the world are different for many reasons, the foremost being the place in which they live more than anything else. It helps them to break down and discard the erroneous belief which many of them have regarding their place in the world. Using Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel I am able to use Transformative Learning Theory to overcome the disorientating dilemma they find themselves in at the beginning of class.

    I could build a new class out of Diamond’s book that encompasses geography, history, and sociology if my school would let me. In fact, I could build two classes out of it. One would focus on why Western Civilization developed like it did and expanded to the Americas while the second one would focus on the development of Eastern Civilization and its failure to expand beyond Asia itself. While courses exist that dive into those ideas, they are built around history more than anything else. Few instructors use environmental determinism in explaining how early mankind developed in the places it did. The ultimate objectives of these courses would be why they developed like they did, not just their history.

    Diamond has written several other books such as Collapse, The Third Chimpanzee, and The World Until Yesterday. He is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has been awarded all kinds of prizes and awards for his research and work in multiple fields. I find it interesting that he began to study environmental history in his fifties which led to this book and many others. This to me is proof that you are not bound by formal rules regarding your education, but rather by using your interests coupled with the research capabilities your education has provided you new careers beckon. This book is a testament to following one’s interests and using one’s intellect. I highly recommend it to all readers. It is one of my favorite books and I have read through it multiple times.
    153 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2005
    _Guns, Germs, and Steel_ by Jared Diamond is one of the most informative, epic, well-written, and fascinating "macrohistory" books I have ever read. In this book, Diamond discussed the rise of complex human societies in the last 13,000 years, seeking to answer one fundamental question; why did some civilizations come to dominate others? Why did the Fertile Crescent and China for instance develop advanced societies with, as the title suggests, guns, germs, and steel, while other areas of the world, such as Polynesia, Australia, and the Americas, did not? Or in those cases where some civilizations were beginning to acquire such things, why did they get off to such a late start? Why did the Spanish conquer the Incans instead of vice versa?

    In a nutshell, he concluded that societies developed differently on different continents not because of racial differences in attitudes or intelligence, but because of differences in continental environments. Advanced technology, centralized political organizations, writing, and professional armies (or simply put the military advantage of simply having large numbers of people), etc. could only emerge in dense, sedentary populations capable of accumulating food surpluses.

    Unfortunately, domesticable wild plant and animal species needed for agriculture to arise were very unevenly distributed around the world, with the most valuable species concentrated in only nine small areas of the globe (Southwest Asia, China, Mesoamerica, the Andes and the adjacent Amazon basin, the eastern U.S., Africa's Sahel, West Africa, Ethiopia, and New Guinea), all of which became the earliest homelands of agriculture and thus regions that got a head start on developing guns, germs, and steel.

    Animals were vital to a society as a source of meat, milk products, fertilizer, transportation, leather, for military use, plow traction, and wool and those areas that lacked suitable animals to domesticate suffered accordingly in terms of societal development. The Late Pleistocene extinctions of large mammals in the Americas and Australia deprived humanity in those areas of potentially very valuable domesticable species. Of the big (over 100 pound) herbivores and omnivores, 148 potential candidates for domestication, they are mostly located in Eurasia (72 candidate species, versus 51 in Sub-Saharan Africa, 24 in the Americas, and 1 in Australia). Further, out of those candidates, only 14 were actually domesticated, 13 of them in Eurasia; what he called the "Major Five" - sheep, the goat, cow, pig, and horse, and the "Minor Nine" - the Arabian camel, Bactrian camel, donkey, reindeer, water buffalo, yak, Bali cattle, mithan (wild ancestor the gaur, found primarily in India and Burma), and the one American one, the llama and alpaca (two well-differentiated breeds of the same species). The other 134 potential candidates were eliminated due to problems with diet, growth rate, problems of captive breeding, nasty disposition, tendency to panic, and/or social structure, any one problem enough to preclude domestication even in modern times. Of further interest, Southwest Asia had seven of the wild ancestors naturally occurring, a huge advantage.

    In the world of plants there were similar disparities in distribution; of the 56 species of grass with the heaviest seeds, at least 10 times heavier than median species, Eurasia's Mediterranean zone had 32 of them, with barley and emmer wheat 3rd and 13th respectively in seed size. In contrast, of the 56 species, only 6 were found in East Asia, 4 in Sub-Saharan Africa, 11 in the Americas, and 2 in Australia.

    Another set of differences lead to a variation in societal evolution in the case of plant and animal domestications as well as in technological innovations and political institutions, as most societies acquire much more from other societies than they invent themselves (his discussion on the evolution of writing and in particular the alphabet in this regard was fascinating). Diffusion and migration within and between continents played a very important role in the development of a society, and in some continents diffusion and migration was considerably easier, most rapid in Eurasia because of its east-west major axis and its relatively modest ecological and geographical barriers. As crops and animals depended strongly on climate and hence on latitude, huge areas ranging almost from the Atlantic to the Pacific were open to the movement of domesticated plants and animals. Diffusion was slower in Africa and especially in the Americas due to those continents north-south major axes (traveling just a few hundred or a thousand miles north or south can render a society's crops and animals completely unsuitable for use) and much more pronounced geographic and ecological barriers (such as the Sahara Desert in Africa). Similarly, diffusion in the last 6,000 years has been easiest from Eurasia to sub-Saharan Africa, while long completely absent between Eurasia and the Americas (isolated at low latitudes by broad oceans and at high latitudes by geography and by a climate suitable just for hunter-gatherers).

    The last set of major factors he analyzed related to continental differences in area or total population size. A larger area or population meant more inventors, more competing societies, more innovations that exist to be adopted, and more pressure to adopt and retain those innovations, as those societies that fail to do so tend to be eliminated or absorbed by competing societies. Among the world's landmasses, area and the number of competing societies were greatest for Eurasia, while considerably smaller for Australia for instance. The Americas, despite their rather large total land area, were in effect fragmented by ecology and geography into a series of poorly connected smaller continents.

    Relating to both population size and the "Eurasians' long intimacy with domestic animals" was the development of germs. Crowd diseases could not sustain themselves in small bands of hunter-gatherers or slash-and-burn farmers, nor perhaps would they develop at all, as only human association with cattle gave us for instance measles (evolved from rinderpest) and smallpox (evolved from cowpox).

    Obviously I have just scratched the surface in my review. This is an excellent book that ties together findings in history, archaeology, paleontology, epidemiology, and linguistics in an extremely readable and informative format.
    25 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Benton
    5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome book
    Reviewed in Canada on November 22, 2024
    Fantastic and engaging read. Really distills a lot of research down to digestible language.
  • Rodrigo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Gostei mto
    Reviewed in Brazil on April 30, 2024
    Livro é ideal para aqueles que buscam entender o porquê das coisas, como o ser humano se desenvolveu de cacadores coletores até a sociedade complexa que temos hoje. O autor trata tudo de maneira extremamente profissional e baseada em fatos.
  • Rafael Aguilar
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro y excelente calidad.
    Reviewed in Mexico on March 19, 2024
    Compré la edición pasta dura, y la calidad de los materiales es muy buena, recomiendo ampliamente.
  • Jonathan
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, in perfect condition
    Reviewed in Germany on October 2, 2024
    Arrived in perfect condition and in good time.
    Regarding the work itself, I can't recommend it highly enough. If you're curious about the human condition, and how the accidents of history and geography had a major impact upon contemporary differences between nations and ethnic groups, this is the book for you. If you read stuff along these lines (history books, etc) you will be impressed at the global perspective Diamond is able to take. (Most such books focus on European/Western history, at least in my experience). I learned so much about Polynesia, pre-colonial north and south American societies, etc. If anything, the one major criticism of the work which I have is that he should ideally do more to explain modern European social/political developments, which he doesn't devote much space to.
    It's a well-worked, thought-provoking series of arguments, building off of the author's knowledge of geography and biology. You can find lots of discussion and criticism of his work on the internet and in academia (which just goes to show what an important and powerful book it is), so I'll leave you to make up your mind about his arguments. Personally, I think he argues his case very convincingly, and most of the criticisms that I've read (including in academic sources - I'm a geography undergrad) don't seem to hold water, except on matters of minor detail.
    I will say one thing, though: ignore people complaining about "geographic determinism". As Diamond himself points out, when biographers or historians write about the impact of major individual leaders upon human history (e.g., Hitler's personality and its role in starting World War 2), nobody accuses these writers of 'individual determinism' or 'psychological determinism' or whatever. Diamond is not denying that individual human beings or cultures have a role in shaping human history. Rather, his point is that, at the largest and most 'macro' scales (and to an extent even at more moderate scales), geographical differences are the ultimate causes of inequalities between groups of people. This includes unequal access to resources, technological innovations, etc. His epilogue in particular argues the case brilliantly, by showing how even present-day inequalities are largely explained by geographical factors which, one would think, are less relevant in the age of globalisation and high-tech societies. But I won't give the details of the argument - judge for yourself once you read it.
  • Bobbie
    5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating, well-researched
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 26, 2024
    Why did history unfold so differently on different continents?
    A fascinating, well-researched account of human history before writing began writing history down. Geography, not race, is the answer..