For the bulk of his career, Grande wrote monographs and articles targeting other scientists and graduate students. During his time as an administrator of the Field Museum, he came to realize that many people did not understand the role and importance of natural history museum research scientists. As a result, in 2009 he began publishing books aimed at broader audiences about the importance and appeal of science and natural history museum research. His first book on the topic was entitled
Gems and Gemstones: Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World, which was published in 2009 with co-author Allison Augustyn. A second book entitled
The Lost World of Fossil Lake: Snapshots from Deep Time was published in 2013. Both books won the American Publisher's Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence. In 2017, he published
Curators: Behind the Scenes of Natural History Museums.
Kirkus Reviews wrote that the book is "certain to appeal to aspiring curators as well as anyone who has wondered what goes on behind the exhibitions." On the book's back cover, the Director of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History wrote, "Lance Grande has lived his life as a natural history museum curator, a profession that emerged in the nineteenth century. His memoir shines a bright light on this profession, its roots, and its place in the twenty-first century" In 2024, he published "The Evolution of Religions. A History of Related Traditions." This book advocates for the use of modern evolutionary theory and philosophy to decipher the deep history of culture, using history of religion studies as a test case. It points out that modern evolutionary analysis is simply a search for group relationships and diversification patterns over time, rather than the older, more subjective notion of searching for innate "ladders of progress". The book contains a timely plea for a broader pluralistic tolerance and understanding of cultural diversity, and contends that this could forestall the extinction of our own species. == Awards and honors ==