Monday, September 10, 2007
It wanders about the theme a lot, which is actually rather nice. Is it great? Nah. Must you read this? Nah. It's not Brainiac or some such, but it's O.K. and kept me out of trouble for a few hours while Audrey was sleeping and rehearsing.
Friday, September 07, 2007
15: Brain Men: The Insider's Guide to Quizzing, Marcus Berkmann
Good fun, in the same vein as Ken Jennings' Brainiac. Lots of amusing typically British writing. An example, discussing the Trivial Pursuit mania of the 80's:
So, by a strange process of social osmosis, it gradually became accepted that the game was crap but the questions were the thing. People would say, "Let's junk the game and just ask each other the questions." Cheeses ceased to matter, as did the argument whether they should be called cheeses or cakes. (If the little things were cakes, what was the big round thing you put them in? The big cake?) Quiz culture, barely extant, was already beginning to evolve.
Sunday, September 02, 2007
14: Word Freak, Stefan Fatsis
Recommended by Ken in his blog or book somewhere, and Jai has challenged me to an online Scrabble game (on facebook, of all places), so this seemed like a good pick. And luckily it indeed is good enough to read cover-to-cover in one labo(u)r day weekend. (With Audrey in Orange County I have nothing better to do than read and clean the apartment—guess which one doesn't get done?)
Does the author's obsession with his ranking become annoying? Yes. Does his slip-up about "creating more neurons" make me scoff? Naturally. By the end of the book, am I reminded of James McManus's attitude in Positively Fifth Street? Yes (and, no, that's not good at all, people). Did it make me want to play Scrabble? Indeed it did, and that's enough for me.
Does the author's obsession with his ranking become annoying? Yes. Does his slip-up about "creating more neurons" make me scoff? Naturally. By the end of the book, am I reminded of James McManus's attitude in Positively Fifth Street? Yes (and, no, that's not good at all, people). Did it make me want to play Scrabble? Indeed it did, and that's enough for me.
13: Brainiac, Ken Jennings
More goodness: funny, articulate (or, I suppose, well-articulated), and interesting. Ken's blog is also excellent. Made me go out and buy some other Jeopardy! books. But of course.
The whole thing is filled with imaginative prose and witty references to pop culture. Example, after mentioning the problems of confidentiality contracts and repeated tape-dates:
The whole thing is filled with imaginative prose and witty references to pop culture. Example, after mentioning the problems of confidentiality contracts and repeated tape-dates:
Despite what I was always taught by Sunday school teachers and TV after-school specials, our tangled web of lies seems to hold up okay. We find a friend of Mindy's who didn't know in advance about my Jeopardy! tape dates, and she agrees to babysit Dylan. My boss tells everyone at work that I have the flu. In the age of the cell phone, it's easy to pretend we're still in Salt Lake City even when my parents call while we're stuck in traffic on the San Diego Freeway. But the whole charade is exhausting. This must be what it feels like to be a secret agent, or Spider-Man.
12: Assassination Vacation, Sarah Vowell
Kick ass! Awesomeness abounds. Funny, interesting, cool. Must re-read this.
11: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, J.K. Rowling
Yeah, whatever. Re-read the previous volume (...and the Half-Blood Prince) after finishing. Not much there, really. Book 1: yeah. Book 4: yeah. The rest? Ugh.
10: Frankie Manning: Ambassador of Lindy Hop, Frankie Manning and Cynthia R. Millman
Bought it in Herrang and had everybody mentioned in it, starting with Frankie, sign it.
Excellent read—if you're interested in swing dancing, that is.
Excellent read—if you're interested in swing dancing, that is.