Reviews
"In First Light G. R. Evans offers a lively survey of scores of explanations of the creation of the world across periods, continents, and disciplines. She covers Eastern as well as Western religions, 'primitive' myths, scientific explanations, and philosophical assessments. She continually shows unexpected similarities. But she finally gives a reluctant 'no' to the question whether, as Eliot's character Casaubon in Middlemarch asked, there is a single 'key to all mythologies.' This is a delightful work." - Robert A Segal, Sixth Century Professor of Religious Studies, University of Aberdeen, author of Myth: A Very Short Introduction and Theorizing About Myth "It may seem that the question of human origins has never been more controversial than today. But in this informative and elegantly written book, G. R. Evans shows how there have always been competing narratives of how the world began and about the significance of human existence. With wide-ranging scholarship and an engaging style, she offers an intriguing and thought-provoking exploration of a set of perennial questions." - Peter Harrison, Director, Centre for the History of European Discourses, University of Queensland, formerly Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion in the University of Oxford, editor of The Cambridge Companion to Science and Religion, "In First Light G. R. Evans offers a lively survey of scores of explanations of the creation of the world across periods, continents, and disciplines. She covers Eastern as well as Western religions, 'primitive' myths, scientific explanations, and philosophical assessments. She continually shows unexpected similarities. But she finally gives a reluctant 'no' to the question whether, as Eliot's character Casaubon in Middlemarch asked, there is a single 'key to all mythologies.' This is a delightful work." Robert A Segal, Sixth Century Professor of Religious Studies, University of Aberdeen, author of Myth: A Very Short Introduction and Theorizing About Myth "It may seem that the question of human origins has never been more controversial than today. But in this informative and elegantly written book, G. R. Evans shows how there have always been competing narratives of how the world began and about the significance of human existence. With wide-ranging scholarship and an engaging style, she offers an intriguing and thought-provoking exploration of a set of perennial questions." Peter Harrison, Director, Centre for the History of European Discourses, University of Queensland, formerly Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion in the University of Oxford, editor of The Cambridge Companion to Science and Religion