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Sto caricando le informazioni... QI: The Second Book of General Ignorance (2010)di John Lloyd, John Mitchinson (Autore)
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Allereerst, de Nederlandse titel is verkeerd en geeft een verkeerde indruk van de inhoud van het boek. De originele titel is 'The Second Book of General Ignorance: Everything You Think You Know Is (Still) Wrong', en moest dus vertaald worden als, bijvoorbeeld, 'algemene onwetenheid', aangezien er feitjes worden behandeld die je vroeger wel geleerd hebt, maar nu niet meer weet (en ontkracht worden) of die, afhankelijk van de omstandigheden, triviaal of irrelevant zijn. Maar in elk geval zijn veel van de vermelde items wel nuttig om te weten. Het boek is een uitloper van het quizprogramma QI, waarin allerhande weetjes worden opgeworpen, al dan niet beantwoord met en humoristische inslag. Wetenschap, geschiedenis, en dergelijke meer komen aan bod. In Vlaanderen hadden we een vergelijkbare show: 'Scheire en de Schepping'. Behandelde weetjes zijn bijvoorbeeld: - Wie maakte de eerste vlucht in een vliegtuig? - Wat is de hardste stof? - Welke kleur draag je het best om koel te blijven? - Wie vermoordde Jeanne d'Arc? - Waar komt de Schotse ruit vandaag? - Wat is de oorzaak van tintelingen? - Hoe weet je wanneer de zon onder is? - Welk deel van het eten wordt in de magnetron het eerst gaar? - enz... Natuurlijk wordt er niet diep ingegaan per item, daarvoor bestaan andere boeken. Maar het wakkert wel je interesse en aandacht aan om het leven anders te gaan bekijken. Dergelijke Q&A-boeken, net zoals deze van bijv. [a:New Scientist|3179|New Scientist|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-ccc56e79bcc2db9e6cdcd450a4940d46.png], zijn leuke toevoegsels aan je collectie en handig om tussendoor eens te lezen of te herlezen. As someone with an unquenchable thirst for trivia and obscure knowledge I always enjoys books like this; lots of short entries delivering oddball facts that I like to squirrel away in the recesses of mind (usually displacing unimportant information like my date of birth or similar). Looking at random entries, I see that the coldest temperature ever recorded in England was -26.1 degrees Celsius at Newport, Shropshire on 10 January 1982. Never been there but I'll be sure to pack an extra jumper if I ever do. Similarly I find that the scientific term for creaking joints is "crepitus", a word I'm required to use with ever increasing frequency these days. And a shout-out to Lord Howard of Effingham, who led the English fleet against the Spanish Armada but for some reason it's Drake that gets the plaudits. Termino questo testo e mi rendo conto che la mia vita e' sempre stata mossa da poca curiosità, rispetto a quella che ha pervaso i due John autori. In questo secondo - come nel primo - apprezzo la capacità dell'editor di rendere facile e istruttiva la lettura, grazie anche alle frequenti indicazioni etimologiche dei termini. Poi sapere che Pocahontas e' morta a 22 anni ed e' stato il primo americano ad essere seppellito in Gran Bretagna è straziante... Per non parlare del peso delle nuvole, o del rapporto tra alcool e antibiotici - nullo, come i miei esperimenti mi avevano sempre confermato :-) nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Siete convinti che il primo volo in aereoplano l'abbiano fatto i fratelli Wright? Che Napoleone fosse un tappo? E che le arance - basta il nome - siano arancioni? O che i pipistrelli siano ciechi? Be', vi sbagliate di grosso... Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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This book, like The First Book of General Ignorance before it, is a collection of such questions with their answers (and, as on the show, sometimes vaguely related tangents, as well). An example: Where is the largest known lake? No, geography buffs, it's not the Caspian Sea! We never said it had to be on Earth, did we? Or that it had to be filled with water. And it turns out there's a really big methane lake on Titan.
This stuff, admittedly, is nowhere near as hilarious and entertaining in book form as it is on TV, but as trivia books go, these are definitely high-quality, full of interesting little tidbits, and very readable. I also found myself admiring the structure of this one. Every question somehow manages to feel at least vaguely related to the one before, and yet they end up covering a very wide range of subject matter. One moment you're reading about Roman history, and before you know it, you've somehow seamlessly slid onto the topic of organ transplants. ( )