Selected Product: | QI: The Book of General Ignorance Hardcover Edition: TV Tie in Ed Author: John Lloyd, John Mitchinson Publisher: Faber and Faber Release Date: October 2006 ISBN-10: 0571233686 ISBN-13: 9780571233687 List Price: £12.99 Average Customer Rating: | | The Putdowns and Insults Bible: Bitchy Barbs and Wicked Wit for Every Occasion ISBN-10: 1905449232 Wit and Wisdom: The Art of the Put-down ISBN-10: 1905403054 The Encyclopedia of Useless Information ISBN-10: 1402208286 1001 Smartest Things Ever Said ISBN-10: 1592287883 Funny Insults ISBN-10: 1901374173 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for QI: The Book of General Ignorance by John Lloyd, John Mitchinson (ISBN-10: 0571233686, ISBN-13: 9780571233687). At this time we have not yet written a review for QI: The Book of General Ignorance by John Lloyd, John Mitchinson (ISBN-10: 0571233686, ISBN-13: 9780571233687). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com fun but tedious at times | Customer Rating: | | This is a fun book to pick up and put down at leisure but it loses something for not being delivered by the dry tones of Stephen Fry. If you are an avid watcher of the series you will have heard most of these entries before but there are still some gems among them. Some of the explanations do go on and there seems to be a fascintaion with space that just doesn't excite me but there were a few chuckles along the way. At the end there is a disclaimer inviting readers to send in alternative answers or explanations which does dilute the whole thing a bit. Good for picking up trivia to delight your mates at the pub. | Not entirely fact... | Customer Rating: | | It's a good book, easy to read, informative and amusing. In fact, it's so informative that one is tempted to learn parts of it as ammunition for showing off how impressively clever you are to your friends; dismissing common knowledge as fiction is a satisfying thing to do. That is, until you come across something that the book claims to be true which you know in fact to be false (or more likely, not the entire truth). And by "know" I mean parts that cross over with my degree and which I have studied actual research journals on. Once I realised that the book takes liberties for the sake of sounding a bit impressive and sensational, I lost faith in pretty much everything else it claimed to be true. I'm sure alot of it is genuine, but how do you know which bits? And if it's not necessarily true, where's the fun in knowing it? | Intrestingly fastinating | Customer Rating: | | Having never seen an episode of QI, I was unsure what to expect from this book however i was not disappointed. It is a very readable and fascinating book showing you just how many things you think you know are wrong. I enjoyed reading it and read it over the weekend but my friends and relatives enjoyed it less so as i quizzed them, knowing they would get the answers wrong. A very interesting read for anyone wishing to extend their general knowledge. | The Book of "Ah-ha!" Moments | Customer Rating: | This curious and endlessly diverting little tome will provide ammunition for those pub debate moments and settle pub quizzes rapidly. Be prepared however to annoy those over the niceties of the difference between 'highest' and 'tallest' in terms of the 'Everest is the highest mountain, discuss' type entry!
You can actually feel your mind expanding upon reading this.
Super - this is the sort of book that everyone finds diverting, though could have done with a more detailed index. | Well worth the money | Customer Rating: | | A really fantastic book. You'll soon start to realise everything you thought you knew is wrong, and you'll end up telling all your friends and relatives all your new-found knowledge! |
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