Tag: Britain

John Lloyd, James Harkin and Anne Miller – 1,423 Qi Facts to Bowl You Over | Review

Title: 1,423 Qi Facts to Bowl You Over

Author: John Lloyd, James Harkin and Anne Miller

Type: Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 390

Rating: 4*/5

 

John Lloyd, James Harkin and Anne Miller - 1,423 Qi Facts to Bowl You Over

John Lloyd, James Harkin and Anne Miller – 1,423 Qi Facts to Bowl You Over

 

Disclaimer: While I aim to be unbiased, I received a copy of this book for free for review purposes.

I’ve read and reviewed a few of these books so far, and so we’re now at the point where Faber & Faber just automatically pop a copy of every new one as and when they’re released. There’s not too much that I can say here that I haven’t said for the previous ones. It’s aesthetically pleasing, interesting and easy to either dip in and out of or to read from cover to cover.

What I will say is that this particular collection feels somehow more “up to date” than previous releases have, possibly because it includes a bunch of facts about technology, the internet and social media. But honestly, while slightly over 1,400 facts might seem intimidating, I binged my way through the entire book in an afternoon. What can I say? I love trivia.

I’m not sure what else I can tell you here to sell you on the book, and so I figure I’m just going to share a few facts until I hit my word count. So here we go. A clock’s second hand is really it’s third hand. People who buy “bags for life” are safer drivers. In 2017, Doris Day discovered she was two years older than she thought she was. If you stood on top of a mountain on the moon and fired a gun at the horizon, you could shoot yourself in the back. In 2010, Fiji lost its original Declaration of Independence and had to ask Britain for a photocopy.

Still not convinced? Here are some more. The award ceremony for obituary writers is called “The Grimmies“. Richard Nixon once ordered a nuclear strike on North Korea while drunk. In 2004, a pine tree planted in memory of George Harrison died after an infestation of beetles. And of course, people who read books live longer than those who don’t. I like that last fact. It bodes well for me, and presumably for you too. If these facts haven’t swayed you then I guess this book isn’t for you. If they have, go ahead and get it.

 

John Lloyd and John Mitchinson

John Lloyd and John Mitchinson

 

Click here to buy 1,423 Qi Facts to Bowl You Over.


Minoo Dinshaw – Outlandish Knight | Review

Title: Outlandish Knight

Author: Minoo Dinshaw

Type: Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 768

Rating: 4*/5

 

Minoo Dinshaw - Outlandish Knight

Minoo Dinshaw – Outlandish Knight

 

Disclaimer: I was sent a copy of this book for free to review as part of my position on the Young Writer of the Year Award shadow panel. Click here to find out more about that.

Well, I mean, where do I start. There’s a lot to take in from this book, but I guess the best place to start is to explain that this is a biography of a man called Steven Runciman, a historian and author who was one of the foremost experts on the Byzantine Empire. And the Byzantine Empire, as every good schoolboy knows, “was the continuation of the Roman Empire in the East during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, when its capital city was Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul, which had been founded as Byzantium). It survived the fragmentation and fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD and continued to exist for an additional thousand years until it fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453.” Yes, I did just get that from Wikipedia.

As you can imagine, this isn’t necessarily the kind of book that I’d usually read. It was incredibly well-written and thoroughly researched, and while I did enjoy it as a whole, I struggled to think of a single person that I’d recommend it to. There are so many books to read and such little time, and seeing as most people have never heard of Steven Runciman, I’m not sure why you’d take the time to read it. It does a great job of preserving the old boys’ club vibe of Britain in the early 20th century, and I’m sure it’ll ultimately have at least some historical value, but for fun? Eh.

On the plus side, Runciman did live an interesting life, and he was even friends with a bunch of people whose names you’d probably recognise. People like George Orwell and the Queen Mother, for example. But it is a little strange to read a biography when you haven’t heard of the person but you’ve heard of many of his contemporaries. The result is almost a book about someone who was famous for being famous, if you can even call it fame. So he’s basically the Paris Hilton of the field of Byzantine history.

 

Minoo Dinshaw

Minoo Dinshaw

 

Despite all of this, I’m not going to pretend that I didn’t enjoy this book, because I did. I’m pretty glad that I read it and I’m equally glad that I finished it. It was certainly more enjoyable to me than, say, Homer’s Odyssey, but it did kind of feel similar in that I was reading it so that I could say that I’ve read it, rather than because I was super keen to get stuck in.

There’s also the fact that a huge chunk of this book is made up from the notes at the end. That might seem off-putting at first, because it adds a huge chunk to the book and makes it difficult to hold it, especially if you’re carrying it around on public transport or trying to read it in bed. Perhaps an electronic version would have worked better, but then I don’t read e-books and so I doubt I would have ever picked it up. An audio book, then.

Actually, I think there’s so much detail here that an electronic copy really would work better, because it would allow the author to link to other sources and to go into extra detail on some of the different people that Runciman met. The man lived into his nineties and appears to have had a pretty decent archive of diaries and photographs, and he’d also written an unpublished autiobiography. With such a wealth of material, perhaps it’s no surprise that the book was this long – but equally, it could probably have been even longer.

Overall, then, I found it pretty easy to rate this book, but I still struggle to think of a single person I’d recommend it to. Unless you’re an existing fan of Steven Runciman, if such a thing exists, or unless you’re studying either Runciman or Byzantine history, I’m just not sure why you’d want it. And like I said, this has nothing to do with the quality of the writing or the research. It’s genuinely very well done. I just can’t really think who it would appeal to. I feel as though Dinshaw wrote this because it was a personal passion project rather than for any mainstream recognition. And you know what? There’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.

 

Steven Runciman

Steven Runciman

 

Click here to buy Outlandish Knight.