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QI: The Book of Animal Ignorance

By: John Lloyd John Mitchinson
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Faber and Faber
ISBN: 0571233708
ISBN-13: 9780571233700
Released: 04 Oct 2007
RRP: £12.99
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Customer Reviews

Packed full of information - By: Ibrahim Ali, 13 Nov 2008
A wonderful collection of animal miscellany. It is only let down by an absence of references & the fact that one wishes that they covered more animals.
Fabulous - By: Supertad, 22 Jan 2008
Fabulous fabulous fabulous fabulous fabulous book. Fabulous. Ideal for reading to your other half when lyingin bed after an overly heavy meal.
Animals or Robots?! - By: Cathy, 20 Nov 2007
Thanks, Jon, for getting me onto Peter Cave's Robots as well as Stephen Fry's Animals. Both books were great & very good for the enquiring mind. Thoroughly recommended.
Animal Thoughts move on! - By: Jon, 16 Nov 2007


I did enjoy Stephen Fry's book which certainly got me thinking.
However, something which has done so even more recently is Peter Cave's Can a Robot be Human. If you want to really get your cells working buy the two! Both are extremely readable & remind you that using your brain can be fun!
Far more interesting and far funnier than the first book - By: grizzly, 12 Nov 2007
The Book of Animal Ignorance is quite different from its predecessor, the Book of General Ignorance. The few people that disliked the first QI book complained that its question & answer style made them feel stupid (although the fact that so many people bought it seems to suggest that people quite enjoyed this). You won't get that feeling when reading the latest edition from the QI team.

The book has lost the question & answer style of the book of general ignorance. Instead it has been organised into two-page sections, each concerning one of 100 animals, organised alphabetically. Hence the focus has drifted away from the ignorance & over to the animal. However, that does not mean that the book is any less interesting.

For someone who religiously watches the TV show which the book accompanies, this book is far more rewarding. The first book lifted much of its material from the general ignorance roundin the show. That which hadn't been seen by viewers of the show, probably hadn't made the cut. For this book it is clear that a considerable amount of extra research has been done.

Since much of the research has been done exclusively for the book, you can begin to perceive some of the themes that preoccupied the authors & their elves. The etymology of animal names is a clear example. Understanding how an animal was named gives a fascinating insight into what we believed we knew about the animalin the past & how our relationship with it has changed. The mouse is an excellent example:

"The very name `mouse' ultimately derives from the Sanskrit root mush, which means mouse & also to steal. Hence wherever we went thereafter - on foot,in carts, or by ship - the little thief kept us company."

There's also a very strong focus on evolution & how natural selection produced some of the stranger animalsin the book. This makes for some interesting discussion, especially for those animals that have existedin isolation for so long.

If the book makes a reference to barbs, spines, nails or unfolding like a Swiss army knife then something about male genitalia is probably about to follow. The topic of animal reproduction & their reproductive organs is something this book doesn't shy away from. It certainly makes for intriguing discussion. Both men & women will find that this book will create feelings of varying degrees of supremacy & inadequacy. However, one must disagree with the claim that "if the Nine-banded armadillo were human its penis would be 4 feet long". If it were human then it would have a human sized penis.

Accompanying the section on each animal is at least one picture drawn by Ted Dewan. Reading a book as interesting as this, it would be easy to rush onto read about the next animal without glancing at these excellent illustrations. Don't! These pictures don't just illustrate what is describedin the text but also include some of the most interesting pieces of informationin the book. They range from mechanical drawings (Ted Dewan trained as an engineer) to illustrate an owl's ability to move its head around 360 degrees, to the life-like drawing of a catfish. Some will set you laughing out loud like the sketch of a brown bear wandering around a supermarket. Also, don't miss the extra facts & quotesin the grey boxes. The best one accompanies the section about humans.

"Human beings, who are uniquein having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so" Douglas Adams.

The book includes at its start a foreword by Stephen Fry, a `forepaw' by Alan Davies (which is far bigger than his contribution to the first book) & an introduction by the authors John Lloyd & John Mitchinson. All three are well worth reading & avoid skipping straight into the main text. As they explain, QI is as much a philosophy as a TV show & animals are the bread & butter of interestingness. A quote from Henry Bestonin the book:

"In a world older & more complex than ours, they move finished & complete, gifted with the extension of the sense we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren, they are not underlings: they are other nations, caught with ourselvesin the net of life & time."

The amazing illustrations, the tireless research by the elves & the philosophy of QI have combined to create an excellent book. You can dip into it & be confident that you will always be rewarded with something you didn't know. I sincerely suggest that you take up the author's invitation to "come down to the waterhole of ignorance & wallow with us for a while".

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