Incoming Resources
- Sapiens, a graphic history : the birth of humankind, Yuval Noah Harari, David Vandermeulen, Daniel Casanave, Volume one
- The who was? history of the world, by Paula K. Manzanero ; illustrations by Robert Squier, Nancy Harrison, and others
- Big history :, the Big Bang, life on earth, and the rise of humanity, David Christian
- The story of civilization
- Engineering an empire
- A history of the world in twelve shipwrecks, David Gibbins
- The Silk Roads, a new history of the world, Peter Frankopan
- Red, a history of the redhead, Jacky Colliss Harvey
- Daily life through world history in primary documents, Lawrence Morris, general editor
- Origin story, a big history of everything, David Christian
- The top ten events that changed the world, Anita Ganeri
- Sapiens, a graphic history, Yuval Noah Harari, David Vandermeulen, Daniel Casanave, Volume one
- A Disney princess journey through history, by Courtney B. Carbone ; illustrated by the Disney Storybook Art Team
- The history book, written by Sufiya Ahmed, Peter Chrisp, Jenny Cox, Seun Matiluko, Andrea Mills
- The Greeks, a global history, Roderick Beaton
- Sapiens, a brief history of humankind, Yuval Noah Harari
- 50 children, one ordinary American couple's extraordinary rescue mission into the heart of Nazi Germany, Steven Pressman
- The creators, by Daniel J. Boorstin
- World history, from the ancient world to the information age, Philip Parker
- The art of more, how mathematics created civilization, Michael Brooks
- The outline of history,, being a plain history of life and mankind,, by H. G. Wells. Rev. and brought up to date by Raymond Postgate and G. P. Wells. With maps and plans by J. F. Horrabin
- The discoverers, Daniel J. Boorstin
- National Geographic almanac of world history, Patricia S. Daniels and Stephen G. Hyslop ; foreword by Douglas Brinkley
- When Hitler took cocaine and Lenin lost his brain, history's unknown chapters, Giles Milton
- Big history, foreword by David Christian
- History of the world in 1,000 objects
- Did the Romans eat chips?, and other questions about history, Paul Mason