Since the publication of his first book The Selfish Gene in 1976, evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins has made a name for himself promoting the beauty of science while denouncing religion. In 2006 he released The God Delusion, an atheist title whose popularity galvanized a movement.
Sharing a list of his own favorite books with The Week, Dawkins included stories of war, satire and science fiction. Find his reading list below, and complement with the bookshelves of Christopher Hitchens, Carl Sagan and David Attenborough.
Red Strangers by Elspeth Huxley
“This epic saga sweeping through four generations of life among Kenya’s Kikuyu tribe is a novel of Steinbeckian stature neglected by literary connoisseurs. Huxley leads us into the Kikuyu world so that, when the British arrive, they seem as alien as invading Martians. Her descriptive powers rival Steinbeck’s, but her imagery is drawn from the Kikuyu mind. A felled tree ‘tottered like a drunken elder.'” -RD
Dark Universe by Daniel F. Galouye
“The people of this sci-fi novel live underground in darkness. They retain ‘light’ in their language, but only in allusions to a lost paradise. They worship Light (‘For Light’s sake!’), and their theology includes demonic figures that engineered the fall from Light’s grace. The demons are called Strontium, Cobalt, and the arch-devil, ‘Hydrogen Himself.’ Go figure, as you Americans say.” -RD
Sword of Honor by Evelyn Waugh
“How could so profoundly sensitive a writer of beautiful English have been such an apparently shallow, even unpleasant, man? Whatever the answer, I re-read Waugh’s books again and again, mesmerized by the chiseled craftsmanship of every sentence. I could have chosen any of his books, but the Sword of Honor trilogy, an affectionately comic portrayal of the bungling chaos of military life, is perhaps my favorite.” -RD
Uncle Fred in the Springtime by P.G. Wodehouse
“P.G. Wodehouse is my escape from the sleep-disturbing troubles of life. I know all too exactly what Evelyn Waugh meant when he said, ‘Wodehouse’s idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own.’ I love Jeeves and Bertie, but Uncle Fred teamed up with Lord Emsworth provides perhaps the purest release of all.” -RD
Pluto’s Republic by Peter Medawar
“A winner of the Nobel Prize for medicine, Peter Medawar is also the foremost scientific essayist of the 20th century, with the sort of wit that makes you want to seize his book and rush out into the street to show somebody — anybody.” -RD
(via The Week)