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  • Published: 9 January 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241617663
  • Imprint: Allen Lane
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 208
  • RRP: $48.00

The Naked Neanderthal




A Neanderthal hunter takes us on a riveting journey of discovery

What if we have completely misunderstood who the Neanderthals truly were?

For over a century we saw them as inferior to Homo Sapiens. Today, Neanderthals are seen as fully human, different from us only because of their distant cultural traditions.

Neanderthal hunter and paleoanthropologist Ludovic Slimak understands these enigmatic creatures like no one else after studying them for three decades. Taking us on a fascinating archaeological investigation from the Arctic Circle to the deep Mediterranean forests, he traces their steps, deciphering their stories through every single detail they left behind.

In this stunning, bold book, he argues that Neanderthals should be understood on their own terms. They had their own history, their own rituals, their own customs. Their own intelligence. A remarkable intelligence, for sure, but an intelligence that may have been very different from ours.

A thought-provoking detective story, written with wit and verve, The Naked Neanderthal shifts our understanding of deep history - and in the process reveals just how much we have yet to learn.

  • Published: 9 January 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241617663
  • Imprint: Allen Lane
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 208
  • RRP: $48.00

Praise for The Naked Neanderthal

Roaming through caves, digging through earth and rocks, and unearthing fossils, this adventurous, bearded archaeologist takes us from the Arctic Circle to Mediterranean forests in his search for the famous Neanderthal. His personal quest combined with the scientific argument gives the book its real weight. The writing is lively and the author deftly uses sarcasm and shock factor

Les Echos

A candid and uncompromising approach to a much-debated part of humanity's early history ... Slimak immerses us in the daily life of a prehistoric archaeologist ... a bold book

L'Histoire.fr

Ludovic Slimak takes us on an astonishing archaeological quest. . . he squarely confronts the myths surrounding this extinct species ... This human 'creature' is the Neanderthal, of course. But it's us too, whose unexpected portrait emerges from this comparison across millennia

Les Rencontres Philosophiques de Monaco

With the style of a poet and imagination of a philosopher, Ludovic Slimak probes the minds of Neanderthals, our closest cousins. All too often Neanderthals are envisioned as either prehistoric brutes or full humans, but Slimak argues that they were something unique, a species that developed their own forms of consciousness and intelligence. In an age of artificial intelligence, this fun and provocative book is a reminder that we still have a lot to learn about biological intelligence

Steve Brusatte, author of The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs

Ludovic Slimak provides a remarkable and well-informed account of the many facets of the lost Neanderthals. It shows us what it means to be human and allows us to better imagine what extraterrestrials might be like

Avi Loeb, author of Extraterrestrial

A thrilling, bracing and scholarly introduction to modes of being and of paying attention to the world which are both akin to ours and importantly and revealingly different. We need urgently to consider less dysfunctional ways of occupying the cosmos and our own heads. The Neanderthals, speaking movingly and iconoclastically through Slimak, might be able to help

Charles Foster, author of Being a Beast

Who were the Neanderthals, and what do we really know about their artefacts and tools, customs and culture? An eye-opening and refreshing account, full of surprising revelations and personal reflections from a researcher who has spent thirty years coming face-to-face with another human species

Lewis Dartnell, author of Being Human

A fascinating, immensely enjoyable read by a brilliant and original thinker who has dedicated his working life to studying Neanderthals

Jonathan Kennedy, author of Pathogenesis

Neanderthal hunter Ludovic Slimak has dedicated decades to unearthing the mystery of our prehistoric ancestors. Now he has found a missing piece that radically reshapes our understanding – not just of the Neanderthals but of humanity itself

Michael Segalov, Observer

Intriguing … Ludovic Slimak finds unique insights through an exhaustive excavation he conducted of a rock shelter in France – a Rosetta Stone of the Neanderthal worldThe Naked Neanderthal sets out to free this extinct species of the prejudices we have imposed – and, as such, is a resounding success

Alison George, New Scientist

One of the most enjoyable and enlightening history books of the year, Ludovic Slimak’s The Naked Neanderthal, attempts to teach us about ourselves by teaching us about the mysterious, dead creatures we call Neanderthals

Prospect Magazine, Books of the Year 2023

Vivid, refreshing ... this intriguing book offers personal vignettes of archaeological excavations and provocative critiques of researchers’ tendencies to interpret Neanderthals as the intellectual and creative cousins of Homo sapiens ... The Naked Neanderthal is absorbing, elegantly written and sometimes mischievously humorous, ... a wealth of useful, up-to-date information and debate

Rebecca Wragg Sykes, Nature

An exhilarating contemplation of human otherness … Clear explications of scientific concepts, lively commentary on the implications of competing ideas, and engaging storytelling describing the pursuit of knowledge by dedicated investigators bring a startling picture of an alternate humanity into view … Also excellent is the author’s broader discussion of how our own human prejudices have limited our appreciation of the Neanderthals’ achievements, a perceptual blindness he convincingly relates to modern forms of racism. Slimak shows how we have much more to learn about ourselves by studying "exotic sensibilities" and more fully acknowledging "our nature not as humanity but as a humanity"

Kirkus Reviews

An entertaining book … His research has led him to conclude that Neanderthals weren’t another version of modern Homo sapiens when it comes to mental structures. They were instead an utterly different humanity

Jules Stewart, Geographical