From Monkey to Man, or, Society in the Tertiary Age by Austin Bierbower
Picture this: you're at a dusty old bookshop, and this title, From Monkey to Man, or, Society in the Tertiary Age, catches your eye. You read the first few pages and—bam—you're thrown into Earth's forgotten prehistory, millions of years before the pyramids or even fire walkers. Austin Bierbower asks the nerdiest question: what if society was already among us back in the Stone Age? Believe it or not, he kind of proves it. Not exactly a novel, this is a quirky, almost eye-witness report from a lost world.
\n\nThe Story
\nWritten in 1899, this book jumps into a bold idea—Tertiary Era humanoids already had group living, property, even laws. Bierbower paints them as intelligent savages; not so different from us when you get down to ambition and emotional messes. You basically go through all the stuff that makes life hard: wars, love triangles, thinking about why the Sun returns. What tickled me most? His crackpot theory that a big, warm-pulse supercontinent crumbled into Africa, South America, Europe... and with it smashed their entire half-grown civilization. Whole societies just folded into stone and blew away in time.
\n\nWhy You Should Read It
\nReading this felt like sitting on a porch in 1900 with some clever—but wild—great uncle who’s holding a stegosaurus thighbone while making epic guesses about the human heart. It’s not science—it’s an imagination party. Every chapter slams you with jaw-dropping claims, and your inner science teacher will scream, but man... it’s fun. Makes younger me wonder how ancient our bad habits actually are. Somehow it’s hopeful without being sugar-sweet: the most primitive of dudes still had love and struggle; feels powerful. Warning: you get pulled into a hot-bed debate between blunt biological fact and soul-level coming-of-age chatter among early thought-creatures. Great for early mornings when you want smarts and wonder wrapped as one.
\n\nFinal Verdict
\nIf you adore bubble-bursting history twists or adore stories that glue science fiction to ancient theories—you will crack open a smile with this little tome. Buy it if: you have a friend who loves mysteries or you daydream about forgotten ages during long walks. Play after-midnight mind videos of hot volcanoes quenching a purple sky while philosophers wear lion manes. Yes, please. Come with open eyes: we broke so even bone-ages mirrored us. Perfect for fearless thinkers, alternative history add toks, and anyone craving chills about mankind. Get ready—old dead land is super alive.
This digital edition is based on a public domain text. Use this text in your own projects freely.
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