- Life finds a way, what evolution teaches us about creativity, Andreas Wagner
- The medusa and the snail, more notes of a biology watcher, Lewis Thomas
- Feline philosophy, cats and the meaning of life, John Gray
- The grand delusion, what we know but don't believe, Steve Hagen
- The Bloomsbury companion to the philosophy of science, edited by Steven French and Juha Saatsi
- Hawking incorporated, Stephen Hawking and the anthropology of the knowing subject, Helene Mialet
- Being salmon, being human, encountering the wild in us and us in the wild, Martin Lee Mueller
- Anti-science and the assault on democracy, defending reason in a free society, edited by Michael J. Thompson and Gregory Smulewicz-Zucker
- An introduction to the philosophy of science, Kent W. Staley, Saint Louis University, Missouri
- Natural, how faith in nature's goodness leads to harmful fads, unjust laws, and flawed science, Alan Levinovitz
- Staying with the trouble, making kin in the Chthulucene, Donna J. Haraway
- Heavens on earth, the scientific search for the afterlife, immortality, and utopia, Michael Shermer
- The state of science, what the future holds and the scientists making it happen, Marc Zimmer
- Delusions in science and spirituality, the fall of the standard model and the rise of knowledge from unseen worlds, Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D
- The knowledge machine, how irrationality created modern science, Michael Strevens
- Pills-a-go-go, a fiendish investigation into pill marketing, art, history and consumption, Jim Hogshire ; with contributions from Skylaire Alfvegren [and others]
- Bedeviled, a shadow history of demons in science, Jimena Canales
- Every life is on fire, how thermodynamics explains the origins of living things, Jeremy England
- The nothing that is, a natural history of zero, Robert Kaplan ; illustrations by Ellen Kaplan
- The world according to physics, Jim Al-Khalili
- Beyond weird, why everything you thought you knew about quantum physics is different, Philip Ball
- The moral arc, how science and reason lead humanity toward truth, justice, and freedom, Michael Shermer
- Do humankind's best days lie ahead?, Pinker and Ridley vs. De Botton and Gladwell, Steven Pinker [and three others] ; edited by Rudyard Griffiths
- Waste, a philosophy of things, by William Viney
- Darwin devolves, the new science about DNA that challenges evolution, Michael J. Behe
- The equations of life, how physics shapes evolution, Charles S. Cockell
- Radical ritual, how Burning Man changed the world, Neil Shister
- Philosophy of biology, a very short introduction, Samir Okasha
- The fabric of the cosmos, space, time, and the texture of reality, Brian Greene
- The new ABCs of research, achieving breakthrough collaborations, Ben Shneiderman, Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland, USA
- Astonish yourself, 101 experiments in the philosophy of everyday life, Roger-Pol Droit ; translated by Stephen Romer
- Tyrannosaurus Sue, the extraordinary saga of the largest, most fought over T. rex ever found, Steve Fiffer ; foreword by Robert T. Bakker
- Utopia is creepy, and other provocations, Nicholas Carr
- The crash detectives, investigating the world's most mysterious air disasters, Christine Negroni
- A universe from nothing, why there is something rather than nothing, Lawrence M. Krauss ; with an afterword by Richard Dawkins
- The holographic universe, the revolutionary theory of reality, Michael Talbot ; foreword by Lynne McTaggart
- Beyond biocentrism, rethinking time, space, consciousness, and the illusion of death, Robert Lanza, MD, with Bob Berman
- The retro future, looking to the past to reinvent the future, John Michael Greer
- Think, why you should question everything, Guy P. Harrison
- Frankenstein and the birth of science, Joel Levy
- The writing of spirit, Soul, System, and the Roots of Language Science, Sarah M. Pourciau
- Galileo's middle finger, heretics, activists, and the search for justice in science, Alice Dreger
- Skeptic, viewing the world with a rational eye, Michael Shermer
- Widen the window, training your brain and body to thrive during stress and recover from trauma, Elizabeth A. Stanley, PH.D
- Virtually human, the promise---and the peril---of digital immortality, Martine Rothblatt, Ph.D
- Seeing science, how photography reveals the universe, Marvin Heiferman
- Science in the soul, selected writings of a passionate rationalist, Richard Dawkins ; edited by Gillian Somerscales
- Rise of the necrofauna, the science, ethics, and risks of de-extinction, Britt Wray ; foreword by George Church
- A meaning to life, Michael Ruse
- The science of can and can't, a physicist's journey through the land of counterfactuals, Chiara Marletto