Second Edition. — New York Graphic Society Publishers, 1967. — 240 p. — ISBN: 8212-0275-8.
"The subject of this book is prehistoric man: his way of life and how we came to know about it. That’s a sweeping statement that immediately needs to be explained. Obviously, no one book could try to sum up in two or three hundred pages all that is known about prehistoric man. Such a book would become a series of frenzied paragraphs, packing in so much information that there would really be no information at all. So the subject of this book, in fact, is the life of prehistoric man in certain parts of the world during a certain period of time. The prehistory of Europe from about 25,000 b.c. to the founding of the Roman Empire is our center of attention."
Man Discovers His Past.
From the Caves of France.
The Morning of Mankind.
The Aurignacians.
Venuses and Laurel Leaves.
The End of the Old Stone Age.
People of the Great Bog.
The Kitchen Middens.
The Lake Dwellers.
Dolmens and Menhirs.
The Beaker Folk.
Stonehenge.
The Face of Prehistoric Man.