Abstract: When describing our careers and interests to others, students and practitioners of evolutionary psychology face a challenge that dentists or English teachers don't-many people have no idea what evolutionary psychology is!In the frequent event that somebody asks me to define EP, I generally have a canned response which I rattle off which is usually sufficient to settle most inquiries.But what about those people who are intrigued and want to know more?You could refer them to a thorough introductory textbook like David Buss's (2011) or Daly and Wilson's (1983).Or, you could suggest some of the terrific popular-market books on the subject like Pinker's How the Mind Works (1997) or Dawkins' The Selfish Gene (1976).If they truly have the time and inclination, they will pick up one of these excellent works and be that much more fulfilled and knowledgeable for having done so.But in the fast-paced world of the 21 st century, in which everyone seems to have more to do than they can fit into the day, few are likely to appreciate being assigned three-hundred pages of scientific reading just so they can understand what it is you do, and fewer still are actually going to do it.If only there were a short, light, readerfriendly intro to EP which could be read cover-to-cover in under an hour!Introducing Evolutionary Psychology: A Graphic Guide, originally released in 1999 and recently republished in a new edition, is just such an itemone of over fifty in the Introducing series of books, which covers scads of topics from Aesthetics (Kul-Want, 2007) to Wittgenstein (Heaton & Groves, 1995).It is written by University College Cork lecturer Dylan Evans (although he was a Ph.D. student at the London School of Economics at the time of authorship) and illustrated by Oscar Zarate, an Introducing series regular.As the name implies, each book in the series is designed as an accessible crash course in the eponymous topic for those completely unfamiliar with it.The books are small, almost pocket-sized, and each page contains one or two short paragraphs accompanied by a full-page black and white illustration, usually in cartoon style and often tongue-in-cheek.The format is fun and simple, and it precludes