“This entrancing and sobering collection of thoughts is a worthy successor to The Amoeba in the Room, which opened our eyes to so much.”
— Robin Hanbury-Tenison, explorer
"I learned much from Money’s book. I love his vivid, prose-poetic imagery. Reading him is pure literary pleasure. He knows what to say and, more importantly, he knows how to say it."
— Richard Dawkins FRS, author of "The Selfish Gene" and "Outgrowing God"
"This Dawkins-inspired book is a tour de force of life on Earth. Money eloquently describes the dynamics of life and the quite insignificant place of humans in the grand scheme of existence. Charting important biological discoveries, he describes life from all angles, including our molecular complexity and our genetic makeup. . . . The book brings together many perspectives on human existence to create a beautiful but damning picture of humankind.”
— The Biologist
“If you enjoy an apt reference to Paradise Lost—then you will find much to admire in The Selfish Ape, as I did. . . . Early chapters unleashed waves of nostalgia for my undergraduate biology courses. It is a real achievement to have condensed so much material into so few words, and to have made each chapter such a pleasure to read. . . . Money’s big claim, however, is not just that human beings are cosmically deluded. It is that human nature—the ‘essence’ of humanity—resides in our genes, and that this essence makes the demise of our species ‘natural and inevitable.’”
— Max W. Dresow, University of Minnesota, Metascience
"Money mostly takes the reader on a tour of human biology to show how we are little different from our fellow creatures, spicing up his writing with bleak observation. . . . Money takes the reader on a brief tour through deep time, charting how our planet became habitable and how life evolved, before settling on human biology. These chapters see him explain our physiology, neurobiology, genetics, reproduction, embryology, aging, and dying. He does so with admirable brevity and sometimes exquisitely compact definitions and metaphors. . . . Money livens up his writing with quotes from literature and poetry, such as Shakespeare’s work and Milton’s Paradise Lost, and seemingly revels in casting humans back among the animals."
— NHBS.com
"So what can we do? Usually I’d save discussion of an author’s conclusion for the end of a review, but Money’s solution is so striking it’s worth discussing up front. Though Money seems fairly skeptical about the value of religion, his conclusion isn’t that far removed from a Christian credo: because our time as a species is limited, the important thing is for us to be nicer to each other. If we are nicer, Money suggests, the universe may survive longer than we expect."
— Catholic Herald
"Money’s The Selfish Ape delivers much more than its title promises. It is a wide-ranging reflection on humans and humanity: how we, both as individuals and as a species, came to be, how we function, and how we (will) cease to be. Money presents scientific, literary and philosophical insights into these questions. He does so with clarity, honesty, and good humor."
— David Benatar, professor of philosophy, University of Cape Town
"Here, the depth of Money’s biological knowledge (and good storytelling) shines, as he is able to fluidly connect us to our deepest evolutionary and genetic history. Through tales of the biological ubiquity of cilia and the developmental centrality of Hox genes, the author seamlessly embeds Homo narcissus in a much richer Linnaean fabric."
— Quarterly Review of Biology