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The Book of General Ignorance

The Book of General Ignorance

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Authors: John Mitchinson, John Lloyd
Publisher: Harmony
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $11.90
You Save: $8.05 (40%)



New (39) Used (14) Collectible (1) from $7.95

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 56 reviews
Sales Rank: 448

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.8 x 1.1

ISBN: 0307394913
Dewey Decimal Number: 031.02
EAN: 9780307394910
ASIN: 0307394913

Publication Date: August 7, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 56
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5 out of 5 stars what a fun book!   August 13, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

i loved this book!

it's a collection of short (like, 1 page) mini-essays about things we commonly believe to be true, but aren't. each is written as a question. then the correct answer is revealed, with a load of back up and ancillary information.

a few of the snippets weren't interesting. but overall, i kept finding myself thinking, "ok, i'll read just one more... just one more... ok, another... ok, just one more." i also regularly thought, "wow -- that's fascinating. i wonder if i can remember that!" but i have -- even since i finished reading the book -- found myself foisting my knew and robust knowledge onto my wife and other unsuspecting people, when a pertinent subject came up in conversation. i'm sure they now think i am substantially more brilliant. or annoying. maybe both?

like -- did you know that the tallest mountain in the world is NOT everest? everest is the highest, but the tallest (when including the part under water) is mauna kea, the high point on the island of hawaii.

or, that america is not named after amerigo vespucci (as i'd always understood), but richard ameryk, the wealthy bristol merchant who funded john cabot's voyage to what is now canada, in the late 1400s.

think you know who invented the telephone? you're probably wrong.

how many dog years equal one human year? not seven.

what a rhino's horn is made of? not hair.

how we measure earthquakes? not the richter scale.

what color is a panther? trick question: there's no such thing as a panther.

you get the idea. it's a factoid lover's candy story, a belly rub for the "did you know?" dog in you.



2 out of 5 stars Good for flipping through, but overrated   August 10, 2008
Like a lot of other books that claim to contain "100 things we bet you didn't know" or the like, The Book of General Ignorance is only good for paging through. It's certainly not worthy of a thorough reading, since it spans across so many topics, including religion (and many of us aren't religious, deeming the true "facts" already myths), biological life, famous people, and lots of earth science. Not to mention, these topics are scattered throughout, with no sense of order. However unorganized the book was, I did find it interesting that it would be impossible for Rudolph the Reindeer to be a male, since male reindeer lose their antlers before late December.


2 out of 5 stars Poorly researched   July 18, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book is for fun, but many of the "facts" are wrong or debatable. To correct just one: The universe has not been assumed to be infinite for about 100 years. A very little research would have avoided this erroneous premise.

P.S. Benjamin Franklin made many clever remarks. So why attribute one to him that he didn't make?



5 out of 5 stars Great Book!   July 8, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is really fun to read when friends are over or at family get-togethers. The facts and trivia are really interesting!!! Perfect for giftss!!


4 out of 5 stars Confections for the mind   June 23, 2008
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I can't resist books like this, full of factoid essays on a wide range of subjects ranging from earwig wee-wees to the density in the asteroid belt. The book is like a box of chocolates. You read one 400-word essay and then another and then another, and the next thing you know you've read the whole book!

A mushroom is the largest living thing (it's almost all underground). The tallest mountain in the world (Mauna Kea, not Mount Everest--you knew that) is mostly underwater. (A fine distinction is made between "tallest" and "highest," but hey we're just having fun here in the spirit of trivial pursuit.) The guillotine of course was not invented in France, and French toast, well, isn't. Most of the earth's oxygen comes from algae, etc.

What Messrs John Lloyd and John Mitchinson do here that many trivial books do not do is elaborate well. For example on the entry about oxygen from algae, they let us know that oil and gas come from ancient algae. (Coal is what comes from ancient swampy forests.) They also mention spirulina, food from cyanobacteria that may one day feed humanity's hungry masses since it "yields twenty times more protein per acre than soya beans." So have another spirulina smoothie. Their entry on where you're most likely to get caught in a hailstorm (the Western Highlands of Kenya) elaborates on the size of hailstones (US record, seven inches in diameter hitting the ground in Aurora, Nebraska at 100 MPH in 2003) and how much damage they cause. But hailstorms can be good. A friend and I got caught in a furious hailstorm lasting maybe twenty minutes a couple months ago in Florida. Result: the car, which was caked with smashed-on insects from a cross country trek, as a result of the hard-driving hail, became as clean as if just out of the carwash! I kid you not.

Most of the juicy info in the book is just delicious, but of course I have a few cautionary notes to share. I like the question/answer format but sometimes, in their effort to surprise, the authors seem to be reaching for it a bit, as in "What's the single largest man-made structure on earth?" Not the Great Pyramid or the Great Wall of China, but the Fresh Kills garbage dump on Staten Island. Or, in "Where's the coolest place in the universe?" A lab in Finland in which a pieced of rhodium was cooled to within a billionth of a degree of above absolute zero. Problem here (aside from fooling us) is, how would they know? Maybe some creatures in the Andromeda Galaxy have cooled rhodium to within a trillionth of a degree above absolute zero.

But I'm nitpicking. A more serious criticism is that some of their information is not exactly accurate. They claim on page 65 that hippos are "strict vegetarians" but anybody who's seen the PBS nature special knows that hippos will muscle the crocs aside on occasion and bite into rotting flesh left on the riverbank. And on pages 105-106 they write that the word "gringos," sometimes used by people south of the border to refer to people north of the border, "is thought to come from the Spanish `griego' (Greek)--hence any foreigner (as in the English `it's all Greek to me')." Actually, "gringo" is a corruption of the words "green grow" ("...the lilacs and so does the rue") lyrics from a popular song sung by Anglos around the campfire at night as they travelled westward in covered wagons during the nineteenth century.

In some cases our clever authors equivocate and seem to have their trivia both ways. On page 19 they write "Ice cream may well be a Chinese invention...," while on page 74 they let us know that Nero (who did NOT fiddle while Rome burned) "also invented ice cream." In answer to the question, "What was the first animal to be domesticated?" they give no clear answer, instead they equivocate between reindeers and dogs around 14,000 years ago. I think most authorities would go with dogs.

Regardless of these minor criticisms, I can recommend "The Book of General Ignorance" as a "betcha can't read just one" sort of fun trivia collection.


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