Eo Wilson's Reading List
Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 8 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.
Open in WellRead Daily app →Favorite books (2023)
Favorite books recommended by Eo Wilson, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/eo-wilson-favorite-books/.
Source: radicalreads.com
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle · Buy on Amazon
"Even as a small child I dreamed of going on faraway expeditions to collect insects and other animals. This book set my imagination on fire, and I was thereafter a nesiophile, a lover of islands, the concrete symbols of new worlds awaiting exploration. The compulsion was one of the mental factors that led me in later years to develop (with Robert H. MacArthur) the theory of island biogeography, which has become an influential part of ecology."
Trofim D. Lysenko · Buy on Amazon
"Although I was later to see Lysenkoism for what it was, false in conception, political in aim, and very nearly the death of Soviet genetics, I was enchanted by this little book when I encountered it at the age of sixteen. It appealed to my mood of rebelliousness. It seemed to me that Lysenko was offering a radical and effective challenge to conventional science, and that even the callow and inexperienced might have a chance to proceed directly to new realms of discovery."
Philip Wylie · Buy on Amazon
"When I was a seventeen-year-old college student, these Menckenesque essays broke me out of the fundamentalist Protestant faith in which I had been raised and moved me toward the secular humanism with which I increasingly identify today. I still find Wylie a delightful read."

Sinclair Lewis · Buy on Amazon
"The perfect young man’s book: a vision of a pure life devoted to the search for scientific truth, above money grubbing and hypocrisy. How I longed to be like Arrowsmith, to find my mentor in a real Gottlieb. The feeling was intensified when I discovered Jack London’s Martin Eden shortly afterward."
Erwin Schrödinger (also rec’d by Deepak Chopra ) · Buy on Amazon
"This taut little book, which I encountered as a college freshman, invited biologists to think of life in more purely physical terms. Schrodinger was right of course, as witness the rise of molecular biology soon afterward. For me his arguments suggested delicious mysteries and great challenges. (Later, I was especially pleased when a reviewer likened my own book Genes, Mind, and Culture , published with C. J. Lumsden in 1981, to What Is Life? saying that it offered a comparable challenge from..."
Marcus Aurelius (also rec’d by James Mattis ) · Buy on Amazon
"I hope that I have not missed the editors’ purpose entirely by listing books that affected one rather rebellious adolescent in the 1940s, but I was quite surprised myself when I came up with this list after careful reflection. Let me make partial amends by citing the work that I pull off the shelf most often, and gives me the greatest pleasure, now that I am in my fifties: Meditations , by Marcus Aurelius. For this work reflects the point to which I have come, in company with such a magnifice..."