Steve Brusatte, PhD, is an American paleontologist who teaches at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland. He is the author of the international bestseller The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs and The Rise and Reign of the Mammals. The paleontology advisor on the Jurassic World film franchise, Brusatte has named more than fifteen new species, including the tyrannosaur ""Pinocchio rex"" (Qianzhousaurus), the raptor Zhenyuanlong, and several ancient mammals. His research and writing has been featured in Science, the New York Times, Scientific American, and many other publications.
""What a sensational book! Crisp, gripping, science writing at its very best. If you love birds, you will love this captivating story of how they came to be, how they went from one branch of spry dinosaurs to the astonishing array of winged wonders we have today."" - Jennifer Ackerman, bestselling author of The Genius of Birds and What an Owl Knows ""Dinosaurs never went extinct--they're all around us. In The Story of Birds, paleontologist Steve Brusatte traces the remarkable150-million-year journey of how small, feathered dinosaurs transformed into the more than 10,000 species of birds alive today. From the evolution of flight to the asteroid strike that killed their giant cousins, from terror birds that ruled ancient continents to the startling intelligence of modern crows, Brusatte weaves cutting-edge science and vivid storytelling to give us breathtaking account of one of evolution's greatest survivors. You'll never look at the world outside your window the same way again."" - Neil Shubin, University of Chicago paleontologist, bestselling author of Your Inner Fish, and President of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) ""Steve Brusatte takes us on a thrilling tour into the amazing world of birds, from their origins as the living descendants of dinosaurs to their remarkable cognitive and navigational skills. A perfect addition to his hugely successful earlier books, The Rise and Fall of Dinosaurs and The Rise and Reign of the Mammals."" - Venki Ramakrishnan, Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry and Cambridge University biologist ""An authoritative and endlessly illuminating journey through the evolution of birds--from their dinosaur roots in the Triassic to the hummingbird at your feeder. As one of the world's top paleontologists, as well as one of the finest science communicators working today, no one is better positioned to tell this epic and surprising story than Steve Brusatte. An instant classic. Anyone interested in the story of life on Earth needs this on their bookshelf."" - Peter Brannen, author of The Ends of the World and The Story of Co2 is the Story of Everything The palaeontologist and author of the thoroughly enjoyable The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs turns his attention to our feathery friends and their deep past. Even stranger than you imagined. - The Times, ""Books to look out for in 2026"" ""Palaeontologist Steve Brusatte turns to the evolutionary history of the birds, the 'dinosaurs among us.' Penguins the size of gorillas? Ducks weighing more than cows? I'm in."" - New Scientist, ""The Best of the Best: Four Top Picks for 2026"" ""Brimming with surprises, The Story of Birds reveals evolution as a restless tinkerer and birds as its most radical experiment. Forged in mass extinction, they rebuilt themselves--reinventing flight, reengineering their metabolism, and demonstrating that evolution is not a destination but a restless process. The Story of Birds traces that transformation across deep time, revealing how catastrophe repeatedly fueled innovation. The birds around us become living records of a history far stranger, tougher, and more inventive than we assume. Clear, incisive, and quietly surprising, this book makes it impossible to see the natural world the same way ever again."" - Hakeem Oluseyi, astrophysicist and author of A Quantum Life ""Brusatte's mastery of his field, formidable explanatory powers and engaging style have combined to produce a masterpiece of science writing."" - Washington Post ""[A] Jurassic blockbuster...A gripping read in the best traditions of popular science...Infectiously ebullient."" - The Observer (London) ""Fun-yet-magisterial...Brusatte has emerged as something of a star in the paleontology world. It helps that he's young, charismatic and has good writing chops."" - Globe and Mail (Toronto)