Mental Floss Presents Condensed Knowledge: A Deliciously Irreverent Guide to Feeling Smart Again

by Will Pearson (Editor)

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

AG243 .C594

Publication

HarperResource (2004), Edition: Fifth or Later Edition, 345 pages

Description

Loaded with meaty trivia and tasty, bite-sized facts! mental_floss is proud to offer a delicious, hearty helping of brain-food that's sure to fire up your neurons and tantalize your synapses. Condensed Knowledge is a mouthwatering mix of intriguing facts, lucid explanations, and mind-blowing theories that will satisfy even the hungriest mind! Ingredients include: 5 tiny nations that get no respect * 4 civilizations nobody remembers * 5 classics written under the influence * 4 things your boss has in common with slime mold * 3 schools of thought that will impress the opposite sex * 4 things Einstein got wrong * 5 classical tunes you know from the movies * 3 famous studies that would be illegal today * 2 religious mysteries solved by chemistry * 5 scandals that rocked art, and much more ...… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member woodge
This compendium of factoids is a fun read but probably not something you'd read all at once. It's kind of like a bathroom reader (not that I'm doing that). And in fact, I did read this in several chunks over a span of months. Topics include art, history, science (biology, chemistry, physics, etc),
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pop culture, religion, economics, philosophy, and so forth. And it's written in a cheeky manner with all sorts of fun sidebars. I learned a lot! I remember some! Here's one thing sort of apropos from the religion section I picked up: Did you know there was a legend about a Persian god named Mithra that predates Jesus by centuries. Well, legend has it that Mithra was born of a virgin on December 25 and was visited by sheperds and magi. He had 12 disciples, healed the sick, and cast out devils. He rose again around the vernal equinox (March 21) and ascended into heaven. Sounds somewhat familiar, no?
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LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
None of the bits stuck. If you've a mind that can simply absorb trivia, you might get more out of this. When I was younger, I was able to learn in snatches and integrate, but now that I do actually know most of what was in this book, the new pieces did not make an impact on me. YMMV.
LibraryThing member graspingforthewind
like trivia. When I was a kid, I used to get the magazine 321 Contact (formerly The Electric Company) and would always turn to the “factoids” page before reading any other portion. The little paragraphs of strange and unusual information were fascinating. Why the life cycle of fruit flies, the
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number of cells in a body, or wingspan of the albatross would interest me I have no idea. Nonetheless, they do.

When my wife pointed me to Mental_floss magazine (herself pointed there by a fellow teacher) it was a godsend. No adult magazines had made trivia fun like 321 Contact had done. But the magazine is limited, and comes only bimonthly. I needed my “knowledge fix”, but didn’t want to wait quite so long.

Enter Condensed Knowledge by the editors at Mental_floss. This reference book covers topics like history, philosophy, religion, pop culture, and literature all in short paragraphs grouped into related sections. There might be a section on four different physicists, or 3 countries that don’t exist. A reader might find short descriptions on five books every one should know, or 9 ways you need radioactivity. Such topical groupings and short, interesting paragraphs make this resource readable from beginning to end.

Full Review at Grasping for the Wind
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2004-04-27

Physical description

345 p.; 9.12 inches

ISBN

0060568062 / 9780060568061
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