What did it feel like to be human before all of this?Before the cities, the clocks, the algorithms, and the anxiety. Before we had words for loneliness or burnout or existential dread. What did fear feel like when it had claws? What did hope look like when there were no guarantees of tomorrow?People Before Us traces the interior life of our species across 100, 000 years - not through the eyes of kings and conquerors, but through the raw emotional experience of ordinary people.
A prehistoric mother watching her child through a fever. A medieval peasant bracing for another brutal winter. A factory worker terrified of becoming obsolete. A modern parent lying awake at 2 a.m., phone in hand, wondering if any of this means anything. Spanning 67 chapters and five great eras - from pre-civilization through the digital age - this book reveals what has never changed about us: the hunger for belonging, the need for meaning, the love we cannot explain, and the hope we refuse to abandon.
The tools changed. The fears did not. Whether you are drawn to history, psychology, philosophy, or simply the quiet question of what it means to be alive - this book will make you feel less alone across time. Because the ancient wanderer by the fire and the modern person staring at a screen are asking the same questions. They always were. You are not the first person to feel lost. You are not the first to keep going.
What did it feel like to be human before all of this?Before the cities, the clocks, the algorithms, and the anxiety. Before we had words for loneliness or burnout or existential dread. What did fear feel like when it had claws? What did hope look like when there were no guarantees of tomorrow?People Before Us traces the interior life of our species across 100, 000 years - not through the eyes of kings and conquerors, but through the raw emotional experience of ordinary people.
A prehistoric mother watching her child through a fever. A medieval peasant bracing for another brutal winter. A factory worker terrified of becoming obsolete. A modern parent lying awake at 2 a.m., phone in hand, wondering if any of this means anything. Spanning 67 chapters and five great eras - from pre-civilization through the digital age - this book reveals what has never changed about us: the hunger for belonging, the need for meaning, the love we cannot explain, and the hope we refuse to abandon.
The tools changed. The fears did not. Whether you are drawn to history, psychology, philosophy, or simply the quiet question of what it means to be alive - this book will make you feel less alone across time. Because the ancient wanderer by the fire and the modern person staring at a screen are asking the same questions. They always were. You are not the first person to feel lost. You are not the first to keep going.