My father enjoys interesting non-fiction books that are a little off-beat and different. Tips?
Bill Bryson, for example, is his favourite author in this genre. He also found “How to Build a Time Machine” by Paul Davies last year interesting, though a little too technical.
The Straight Dope and Word Detective books would have been excellent candidates if they were in print and available in time for Christmas. But they aren’t.
“The Order of Things” by Barbara Ann Kipfer also looks like something he would appreciate, but again it’s not something Amazon.co.uk would ship in time.
I’m another person who enjoys books about language – the evolution thereof especially. How and why did the early hominids start communicating through spoken language. In this book, Robin Dunbar argues that it started as gossip, as something to take the place of actual physical primate grooming as groups got larger.
Hello? Amazon.com has several volumes of The Straight Dope available listed “usually ships within 24 hours.” Should be there in time for Xmas if you order in the next few days.
I would have to recommend the “Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader” series. It’s full of crazy, interesting facts that you would never think of. I have given my SO several of them and we both enjoy them a lot. They are always good for a laugh anyway.
Hello. I am in Europe. This is the Internet, please leave your US-centric mindset at the door.
I don’t trust Amazon US to ship anything to me by Christmas, and I certainly don’t want (or can afford) to pay for expedited/priority shipping. In fact, it’s too late for me to order from Amazon US.
My list has a 2 book gift set on it. The Evolution of Useful Things and To Engineer is Human they are in the Signals catalog (public television) .They have overnight delivery the phone # is 800.669.9696 the web site is http://signals.com
“The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language” by John McWhorter was absolutely fascinating. He’s one of those science authors who is a genuinely good writer, but also a good scientist. It was an very interesting read.
You mentioned language. As a student of computational linguistics I have to recommend The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language. by David Crystal. This book covers many aspect of human language and linguitics. The title may sound intimidating but this book is really entertaining and requires no prior knowledge.
I got my copy from German Amazon (in English) but I have seen it here in several places. So it should be possible to find it outside the UK.
Btw. there is a different book called The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language by the same author, but I know nothing about that one.
Bill Bryson has written some language books, but they’re not particularly reliable, factually speaking. I know there have been threads on them fairly regularly. The main one is “Made in America,” which is about American English.
There was a great review of a book recommended by The Economist in the most recent issue, available on Amazon.uk…I’d order one myself, but the shipping to the U.S. would be more expensive than the book, and somehow that just seems wrong…
Anyway, it’s a humor book on the dangers of bad punctuation, and it’s titled Eats, Shoots and Leaves. I’d type out the review, but I can’t fnd my copy of the magazine right now. You can find it online at www.economist.com. If you buy it, tell me how it is! Maybe I will spring for the postal charges…
The American Slang, 2nd Edition by Robert Chapman is a dogeared favorite of mine. Comprehensive, too.
Ditto for the Oxford Essential Dictionary of Foreign Terms in English
Any of the Howdunit series of writer’s reference books, like Scene of the Crime; Cause of Death; Body Trauma, etc. are nice. Lots’o’gory details, too.
Letters From Hell is a collection of all the letters claiming to be from Jack the Ripper. All of the “major” ones are photographed, in full color slides. Most of the several dozen other letters (!), ones that were received up until 1949 (!!) are transcribed.
Case Closed is, from what I hear, a fairly exhaustive study of the Kennedy assassination…that still comes to the conclusion that Oswald acted alone.