Everything all at once How to unleash your inner nerd, tap into radical curiosity, and solve any problem

Bill Nye

Book - 2017

Everyone has an inner nerd just waiting to be awakened by the right passion. Bill Nye will help you find yours. Here Bill shows you how to develop critical thinking skills and create change, using his "everything all at once" approach that leaves no stone unturned. Whether addressing climate change, the future of our society as a whole, personal success, or stripping away the mystery of fire walking, there are certain strategies that get results: looking at the world with relentless curiosity, being driven by a desire for a better future, and being willing to take the actions needed to make change happen. He shares how he came to create this approach -- starting with his Boy Scout training (it turns out that a practical understand...ing of science and engineering is immensely helpful in a capsizing canoe) and moving through the lessons he learned as a full-time engineer at Boeing, a stand-up comedian, CEO of The Planetary Society, and, of course, as Bill Nye The Science Guy. This is the story of how Bill Nye became Bill Nye and how he became a champion of change and an advocate of science. It's how he became The Science Guy. Bill teaches us that we have the power to make real change. Join him in... dare we say it... changing the world.

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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Autobiographies
Published
[Emmaus, Pennsylvania] : Rodale [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Bill Nye (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Subtitle from cover.
Physical Description
ix, 374 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781623367916
  • Bill's guide to doing everything all at once
  • Part I: Principles of nerd living
  • The tao of phi
  • Scout lifeguarding
  • Me against the rock
  • When slide rules ruled
  • The first Earth Day and national service
  • How my parents quit smoking
  • Ned and the "thanks" sign
  • Why the bow tie?
  • Land of the free, home of the nerds
  • Everybody knows something you don't
  • Part II: Nerd ideas into nerd actions
  • The joy of constraints
  • Upside-downside pyramid of design
  • Comedy and me
  • Not faking it
  • Resonating to the nerd beat
  • Critical thinking, critical filtering
  • A vaccine against deception
  • Destiny be damned
  • full speed ahead
  • Time for measured urgency
  • A mind is a wonderful thing to change
  • Part III: How to change the world
  • Are you an imposter?
  • How high can you go?
  • Tragedy of the traffic accident
  • Cold hard facts of ice
  • West Virginians and all that coal
  • Security through nerdiness
  • Think cosmically, act globally
  • Humans control the Earth: nerds should guide the humans
  • A reasoner's manifesto
  • Design for a better future.
Review by New York Times Review

Bucolic Evil: "Word has gotten out that if you write about the Amish, you can sell books." So says a young Amish woman quoted in Valerie WeaverZercher's 2013 study, "Thrill of the Chaste," about the popularity of Amishthemed romance novels - and, to judge from the success of the crime writer Linda Castillo, what's true of romance is also true of murder. Castillo's bestselling Kate Burkholder mysteries feature the police chief of a fictional Amish town, Painters Mill, Ohio; the ninth entry in the series, "Down a Dark Road," enters the hardcover fiction list at No. 14. How did Castillo, who is not Amish herself, come to write about the community? "I'm originally from Ohio and so I was aware of the Amish growing up," she told me by email. The idea for the first Burkholder book struck during a "happenstance trip" to Amish country. "As a writer I love the juxtaposition of such a bucolic setting and the introduction of evil into it," she said. "I knew I'd found the perfect setting. The Amish culture is a bit of a closed society, and I was fascinated by the mystery of that, too." I wondered how Castillo's Amish audience feels about her outsider's portrayal. "The Amish are readers and encourage their kids to read," she said. "One gentleman attended one of my book events and told me he loved the book. Most responses are positive, but I did receive a letter from another Amish man who said he was offended. I do my best to depict the Amish culture in an honest and realistic way, but he took issue with the level of violence." This deep into the series, Castillo said, she has become "obsessed with learning everything I could about the culture. I travel to Amish country every year.... They've invited me into their homes and farms and I've learned much from that one-on-one interaction. One of the Amish men even let me drive his buggy, which was a fascinating and fun experience. The more I learn ... the more my respect for them and their way of life grows."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 30, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review

Still popular three decades after its inception, Bill Nye the Science Guy turned its eponym into a celebrity. The show's origin forms one of many autobiographical anecdotes Nye shares in a work that stands, overall, as his call for action against climate change. Had he stuck with his career in mechanical engineering, Nye's views would not likely enjoy their large potential audience; as it was, in youth he performed stand-up comedy, which sinuously led to the Science Guy persona. It animates these pages still; with humor, Nye espouses his earnest convictions about the importance of rational, scientific thinking, which he asserts repeatedly is under attack from deniers of climate change. Describing numerous instances from his family and professional life, in which he solved problems with methodical logic, Nye avers that the same approach must prevail lest humanity and the environment fall into crisis and catastrophe. Nye also expounds his view of the U.S. Constitution, his prediction of self-driving electric cars, engineering details about his sartorial trademark, the bow tie, and support for space programs and renewable energy.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Bow-tied nerd superhero Nye (Unstoppable: Harnessing Science to Change the World, 2015, etc.) serves up a tasty combination of memoir and manifesto.When he was a kid, writes the author, ever engagingly, it was said that the party didn't start "until Bill gets out the dictionary." A dogged pursuer of what some might call trivia and others the marrow of the universe, Nye loved physics, mathematics, and astronomy as well as geography, language, and literature. In short, he became an adept and enthusiast for knowledge writ large, leading him here to proselytize for "a worldview that involves gathering as much information as possible and being constantly on the lookout for ways to use it for the greater good." The commonweal aspect will sound suspiciously lefty to the climate change deniers and creationists in the audience, but Nye is quite serious; it's not enough, he writes, to geek out about comic-book characters and the changing details of the starship Enterprise over time, not when there are massive problems that only sharp, science-minded people can solve. Throughout the book, the author peppers the narrative with his own various engagements at the places where science and the political sphere meet, from his attendance at the very first Earth Day to his realization, while studying the deadly shortcuts of automakers in engineering school, that planning is the horse that pulls the cart: "A good design doesn't guarantee a great product, because there are plenty of places to go wrong in execution; but you will never, ever have a great product without a very good design." His objections notwithstanding, there are plenty of moments of geeking out in Nye's booke.g., his discussion of the exciting future of self-driven cars and how to apply the principles of good design to save the planet from ourselves. Just the vade mecum for the smart teenager in the family and eminently pleasing reading for grown-up nerds as well. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

PART I Principles of Nerd Living CHAPTER 1 The Tao of Phi Excerpted from Everything All at Once: How to Unleash Your Inner Nerd, Tap into Radical Curiosity and Solve Any Problem by Bill Nye All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.