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Family (How the Human Need for Belonging Shapes Our Lives)
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$29.95
| Expected release date is Oct 6th 2026 |
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Product Details
Author:
Meredith F. Small
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
336
Publisher:
Pegasus Books (October 6, 2026)
Imprint:
Pegasus Books
Release Date:
October 6, 2026
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9798897102068
Weight:
18.78oz
Dimensions:
6" x 9"
File:
Eloquence-SimonSchuster_04102026_P9942819_onix30-20260410.xml
List Price:
$29.95
Pub Discount:
65
Case Pack:
12
As low as:
$23.06
Publisher Identifier:
P-SS
Discount Code:
A
Folder:
Eloquence
Overview
From the acclaimed author of Our Babies, Ourselves comes an illuminating and thought-provoking look at the nature of family across time and cultures.
Family is the most ubiquitous and persistent human social group. Everyone across the world has a family, even if that family has been lost, broken, or transformed. Acclaimed anthropologist Meredith Small, author of Our Babies, Ourselves, examines the very roots of the family and why this particular type of connection is so fundamental to all cultures and all people—and how this understanding can help us navigate our rapidly changing world.
Previous books about family are self-help books designed to start, build, or repair broken families. Family: How the Human Need for Beloning Shapes Our Lives is something different. Small seeks to understand why this particular form of social organization is the bedrock of human interaction. Why do we form families? Why do people place such importance on their family relationships? And what is the reality of family life—does it live up to our expectations? What do families provide for each of us at all the stages of our lives?
Small takes the reader on a journey from the evolutionary roots of family three million years ago to its present-day varied expression. We read that there is fossil evidence of human groups that could be called families, and extensive archaeological finds that when humans settled down and started to grow their own food and build villages and cities, they did so as families.
But within this common framework of a family, there are also complex iterations of the way families are formed and operate. Across the globe, various forms of marriage, parenting, and types of family differ from the Western template of a family of Mom+Dad+kids. People have developed families of all stripes, adapting the notion of family to their own worldview, religious beliefs, and economic necessities.
In a narrative that is both sweeping and intimate in scale, we see how family is not a fixed notion, but something has evolved with us as a species, as varied as the human experience itself. Illuminating and though-provoking, Family shows how our innately human need for belonging can be drawn upon to navigate the uncertainties of today's world.
Family is the most ubiquitous and persistent human social group. Everyone across the world has a family, even if that family has been lost, broken, or transformed. Acclaimed anthropologist Meredith Small, author of Our Babies, Ourselves, examines the very roots of the family and why this particular type of connection is so fundamental to all cultures and all people—and how this understanding can help us navigate our rapidly changing world.
Previous books about family are self-help books designed to start, build, or repair broken families. Family: How the Human Need for Beloning Shapes Our Lives is something different. Small seeks to understand why this particular form of social organization is the bedrock of human interaction. Why do we form families? Why do people place such importance on their family relationships? And what is the reality of family life—does it live up to our expectations? What do families provide for each of us at all the stages of our lives?
Small takes the reader on a journey from the evolutionary roots of family three million years ago to its present-day varied expression. We read that there is fossil evidence of human groups that could be called families, and extensive archaeological finds that when humans settled down and started to grow their own food and build villages and cities, they did so as families.
But within this common framework of a family, there are also complex iterations of the way families are formed and operate. Across the globe, various forms of marriage, parenting, and types of family differ from the Western template of a family of Mom+Dad+kids. People have developed families of all stripes, adapting the notion of family to their own worldview, religious beliefs, and economic necessities.
In a narrative that is both sweeping and intimate in scale, we see how family is not a fixed notion, but something has evolved with us as a species, as varied as the human experience itself. Illuminating and though-provoking, Family shows how our innately human need for belonging can be drawn upon to navigate the uncertainties of today's world.









