The Science of Our Microbial Selves
You have never been alone. From the moment of your birth, trillions of bacteria, fungi, viruses, and archaea have colonised every surface of your body. They train your immune system, digest your food, manufacture vitamins your own cells cannot produce, and communicate with your brain through chemical signals that influence your mood, your appetite, and possibly even your behaviour.
Your body is not just yours — it is an ecosystem, inhabited by a vast microbial community that shapes your health, your mood, and possibly even who you are.
The human microbiome is one of the most important discoveries in modern biology — not because these organisms are new, but because we have only recently developed the tools to see them and begin to understand what they are doing. And what they are doing turns out to be far more consequential than anyone suspected.
Written for a general readership with no specialist background required, the book follows the science wherever it leads — including the places where we are getting it wrong.
New to biology? The companion primer covers the fundamentals — cells, DNA, viruses, fungi, and the tools scientists use to study what they can't see — in plain language, with no prerequisites.
Read the Primer