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Wow, your threads are pretty epic over here. Sorry if the following have already been mentioned. I picked all three up at the same time from the local Oxfam bookshop and they have exhumed a buried interest in this type of thing.

On Deep History and the Brain - Daniel Lord Smail. An important book I think. "What passes for progress in human civilisation,’ he writes, ‘is often nothing more than new developments in the art of changing body chemistry." He argues that culture changes that body chemistry! So religion, monumental architecture, sport and alcohol, amongst others, actually had a physical impact on us as a species.

The stones, so beloved here, changed us.

After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC - Steven Mithen. A survey of known sites. Odd. Fictionalises the narrative voice for some reason. I found it enjoyable.

Conceiving God: The Cognitive Origin and Evolution of Religion - David Lewis-Williams. Still working through this. Fascinating. Still waiting for it all to click into place.

Well this book is sort of literary plus archaeology...

A Distant Prospect of Wessex: Archaeology and the Past in the Life and Works of Thomas Hardy; By Martin JP Davies
A very long revue in Britarch on this thesis turned book (fascinating and readable) it traces the archaeological threads in Hardy's stories. Apparently he was friends with General Pitt Rivers (Britains first inspector of Ancient Monuments). Not sure if Hardy's house Max Gate was built on top of a neolithic monument, but there was a megalithic stone unearthed, which gave rise to the poem "The Shadow of the Stone".
Mandatory pic of Stonehenge on the front...

http://www.plodit.com/buy-a-distant-prospect-of-wessex-archaeology-and-t--9781905739417.html