Everything You Pretend to Know and Are Afraid Someone Will Ask

by Lynette Padwa

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

031.02 PAD

Call number

031.02 PAD

Barcode

5076

Collection

Publication

Penguin Books (1996), 256 pages

Description

You can fool some of the people all of the time--but wouldn't you rather really know what you're talking about?   Why are conservatives on the "right" and liberals on the "left"? What is an archetype? Most people drop these and other cultural references in conversation all the time without really knowing much about them. But with this witty, information-packed book, you can quickly bone up on the actual facts behind the multitude of data, events, and words that come at you each day--and that you've been casually bandying about without really understanding.   Here are invaluable explanations of a wide range of topics that are assumed to be common knowledge, from deciphering newsspeak (What is a spin doctor?) to psychobabble (What's the difference between the ego and the id?) to cyberlingo (What is cyberlingo?); from the supposedly obvious (What makes cholesterol good or bad?) to the deceptively simple (What is a formula race car?). Perfect as a quick reference tool, for browsing, or simply for sharing impressive, newfound knowledge with family and friends, this handbook will endow you with genuine cultural literacy in just a few hours of fun-filled reading.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member kaelirenee
It was cute and funny and is a fairly quick read. It certainly helped my Trivial Pursuit game, but it's better for pointing out areas for further study.
LibraryThing member Sandydog1
The writing in Wikipedia is better and of course, more current. This edition has outlasted its usefulness.

Rating

½ (15 ratings; 3.7)

Pages

256
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