MikeFerrara:
I've been trying to do some reading on evolution. Maybe I haven't found the best sources so If anyone has any suggestions I'd be happy to take a look.
I'm probably a little late replying here, but incase someone hasn't already addressed this:
A good place to start is actually "The Origin of Species" by Darwin. Granted, it is a long and fairly dry book, but it'll give you a really good understanding of the basis of evolutionary theory. Darwin wrote several other books (Descent of Man, Selection in Relation to Sex), all of which are also important to evolutionary theory.
Another good book, which covers a lot of the theory, is "Darwinism And Its Discontents" by Michael Ruse. Also a little dry, but it is a great overview of modern evolutionary theory, and it delves into a lot of the controversies - from the social controversies (creationism, ID) to the scientific controversies (punctuated equilibrium).
Jared Diamond wrote an excellent overview of the evidence suggesting man and chimpanzees share a common ancestor, called "Third Chimpanzee". A great overview of what modern science thinks about this.
Carl Sagan (now deceased) wrote several excellent books which contain great essays about evolution. Id recommend Cosmos and Billions and Billions. Although evolution only makes up a small amount of these books material, the books themselves are very interesting, and give the reader a good since of how the entirety of the scientific community views our universe.
In terms of on-line material, the talk.origins archive is a great source, with an extensive series of articles about all aspects of evolution, abiogenesis, creationism, ID, and other scientific things (radiodating, age of universe, etc). One of the nicer features of this archive is that it is written for the "average joe", so the material tends to be pretty easy to understand. You can find it at:
http://www.talkorigins.org/
I've not listed some of the leading evolutionary authors such as Dawkins and Gould. Although you can learn a lot of evolution from their books, you have to be careful in how you interpret some of what they say - Gould has (well, had, he's dead now) a tendency to promote some theories which were not mainstream. Dawkins tends to stick to the more main-stream material, but often uses this as a platform to jump into raving athiest type material. His most recent books don't even bother with the evolutionary stuff, and jump straight into the atheism. "The Silent Gene" is great, but a lot of what he's written lately is lacking.
Bryan