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Question: the subject of evolution has come up (so far in a remarkably non-wanky way) on a mailing list I'm on, and one of the people has asked for recommendations of sources about it - clear, basic books, websites, what-have-you that deal with the fundamentals. I can't actually recommend anything because I steer far clear of that sort of thing on the web, and all the books I read, and the majority of my education, deal with it on a far deeper level and assume you know the basics already, which only serves to confuse and obfuscate the subject for anyone who doesn't have a grasp of the essentials.
So: any recommendations?
So: any recommendations?

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Hope these help. ^_^
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How I learned about evolution
I found some references online (kind of bad ones). One site said that the Prehistoric Zoobooks was a seperate 10-book set (makes sense, there were several, I don't know if I had the full set). It was published in 1989 and they were written by John Bonnett Wexo or Wexco, put out by Wildlife Education. (Again, the references were VERY crappy...)
They should totally update those and re-publish them. Although maybe with all the controversy and Zoobooks' "kids magazine" rep, they've been avoiding it.
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The Talk.origins FAQ - you'll find tons of links and subfaqs explaining the basics of evolution and rebutting every argument creationists/ID'ers come up with.
Book recs: anything (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-url/index=books&field-author=Richard%20Dawkins/104-3987353-0325559) by Richard Dawkins(he's best known for The Blind Watchmaker, probably) and anything by Jonathan Weiner (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-url/index=books&field-author=JONATHAN%20WEINER/104-3987353-0325559) (I'd start with "Beak of the Finch").
The Panda's Thumb (http://www.pandasthumb.org/) group blog: evolutionary scientists blogging the latest and greatest in evolution.
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The Naked Ape (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0385334303/qid=1115957163/sr=8-1/ref=pd_csp_1/103-5643752-6615011?v=glance&s=books&n=507846) by Desmond Morris.
It doesn't deal just with evolution, but focuses on the evolution and behavior of man specifically. It's a fascinating and revealing read in itself, but the material is presented in a way that anyone can understand it.