Seriously curious The Economist explains : the facts and figures that turn our world upside down

Tom Standage

Book - 2018

"Seriously Curious: The Facts and Figures that Turn Our World Upside Down brings together the very best explainers and charts, written and created by top journalists to help us understand such brain-bending conundrums as why Swedes overpay their taxes, why America still allows child marriage, and what the link is between avocados and crime. Subjects both topical and timeless, profound and peculiar, are explained with The Economist's trademark wit and verve"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

031.02/Standage
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 031.02/Standage Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Public Affairs 2018.
Language
English
Corporate Author
Economist Newspaper Limited
Main Author
Tom Standage (editor)
Corporate Author
Economist Newspaper Limited (-)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Originally published in 2018 by Profile Books Ltd. in Great Britain.
Physical Description
261 pages : illustrations, maps ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781610399937
  • Introduction: the case for being seriously curious
  • Seriously curious: unexpected explanations to stretch your mind
  • Why polygamy makes civil wars more likely
  • Why there is a shortage of sand
  • How shoelaces untie themselves
  • Why the sea is salty
  • Why diamond production may be about to peak
  • Why Boko Haram prefers female suicide bombers
  • Move over, oil. Which countries have the most lithium?
  • Why the global arms trade is booming
  • What do think-tanks do?
  • How to measure the black market for cigarettes
  • Mapping the rise and fall of witch-hunting
  • Globally curious: peculiar proclivities from around the world
  • Why spaghetti is smuggled across the Sahara
  • Why so many places are called Guinea - and turkeys don't come from Turkey
  • Why New Zealand has so many gang members
  • Why the exorcism business is booming in France
  • Why China has the world's worst flight delays
  • Why Somaliland is east Africa's strongest democracy
  • Why yurts are going out of style in Mongolia
  • Which cities have the highest murder rates?
  • Why young Britons are committing fewer crimes
  • How car colours reflect Britain's national mood
  • Why Swedes overpay their taxes
  • Mapping the world's mega-rich
  • Why nobody knows how many Nigerians there are
  • Why Chinese children born in the year of the dragon are more successful
  • Sexual selection: love, sex and marriage
  • Why the sperm-bank business is booming
  • How porn consumption changed during Hawaii's false alarm
  • Why transgender people are being sterilised in some European countries
  • How opinions on acceptable male behaviour vary by age, sex and nationality
  • What porn and listings sites reveal about Britain's gay population
  • Attitudes to same-sex relationships around the world
  • Why couples do more housework than single people
  • What men and women think about their partners' careers and housework
  • How tracking boosts birth rates
  • What explains Europe's low birth rates?
  • Why America still allows child marriage
  • Also on the menu: oddities of food and drink
  • The surprising link between avocados and crime
  • Why China's dog-meat market has expanded
  • Why obesity is a growing problem in poor countries
  • The Argentine-American lemon war of 2001-2018
  • Which European country has the most craft breweries per person?
  • Why some American cities don't like food trucks
  • How wine glasses have got bigger over the years
  • Why food packaging is good for the environment
  • Peak booze? Alcohol consumption is falling around the world
  • Why wheat has a more complex genome than humans
  • Asian countries are eating more wheat
  • By the numbers: economical, with the truth
  • The easiest way to get rich in America
  • Why women still earn much less than men
  • Why China is rebuilding the old Silk Road
  • Why "death taxes" have fallen out of favour
  • Wealth inequality has been increasing since the stone age
  • What makes something a commodity?
  • Does longevity always increase with national wealth?
  • Why do companies exist?
  • Millennial Americans are just as loyal to their employers as previous generations
  • Why old-fashioned manufacturing jobs aren't coming back
  • Why India scrapped its two biggest bank notes
  • The roots of the gender pay gap lie in childhood
  • Department of white coats: science, health and the environment
  • Can young blood really rejuvenate the old?
  • What people want at the end of life
  • How China reduced its air pollution
  • Why forests are spreading in the rich world
  • The Arctic could be ice-free by 2040, 30 years sooner than expected
  • Why there's something in the water in New Zealand
  • Measures to discourage smoking are spreading around the world
  • Why "gene drives" have yet to be deployed in the wild
  • Why it is so hard to fix India's sanitation problems
  • Why some deadly diseases are hard to eradicate
  • Why China is sick of foreign waste
  • Why are wolves coming back in France?
  • Why biggest isn't fastest in the animal kingdom
  • Geek speak: getting technical
  • What is a brain-computer interface?
  • The link between video games and unemployment
  • What do robots do all day?
  • Why 5G might be both faster and slower than previous wireless technologies
  • Mobile phones are more common than electricity in much of sub-Saharan Africa
  • Why self-driving cars will mostly be shared, not owned
  • How ride-hailing apps reduce drink-driving
  • What is augmented reality?
  • Why we're still waiting for the space elevator
  • How astronomers spotted the first interstellar asteroid
  • Why drones could pose a greater risk to aircraft than birds
  • What is the point of spam e-mail?
  • Why the police should wear body cameras
  • Why tech giants are laying their own undersea cables
  • Game theory: sport and leisure
  • Why tennis players grunt
  • Why board games are so popular in Nigeria
  • How drones can keep beaches safe from sharks
  • How football transfers work
  • How St Louis became America's chess capital
  • What does "digitally remastering" a film really mean?
  • How bookmakers deal with winning customers
  • The world's highest-earning football clubs
  • Speaking my language: words and wisdom
  • Why emoji have beneficial linguistic side-effects
  • How the letters of the alphabet got their names
  • Why Papua New Guinea has so many languages
  • Is Serbo-Croatian one language or four?
  • How language is bound up with national identity
  • How machines learned to process human language
  • Why the World Bank needs to cut down on the word "and"
  • The French argument over a new punctuation mark
  • Seasonal selection: festivals and holidays demystified
  • Where new year's resolutions come from
  • How St Patrick's Day celebrations went global
  • Why Easter moves around so much
  • Why Europeans slack off in August
  • How Thanksgiving became a secular holiday
  • How weather, religion and daylight hours affect Christmas music consumption
  • How Christmas, once a raucous carnival, was domesticated
  • Contributors
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This collection of 110 brief essays (one-and-a-half pages, max) considers various current-day conundrums, presents pertinent facts, and offers possible explanations. The simple premise is both intriguing and addictive, as the meandering range of topics is sure to ensnare just about every reader at some point. Entries are sorted by broad categories, such as food, sex, economics, and medicine, and given attention-grabbing titles: "What Do Robots Do All Day?"; "Why Are Wolves Coming Back in France?" The facts reflect data collected by scholars, government agencies, international organizations, think tanks, and other seemingly reputable sources, and are occasionally accompanied by charts or graphs. The analyses reflect commonsense logic and readily acknowledge incongruencies and contradictions. Standage, prolific author (Writing on the Wall: Social Media the First 2,000 Years , 2013) and deputy editor at the Economist, maintains a breezy style, keeping the barrage of information accessible and manageable. This sequel to Go Figure: Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know (2016) is in turn bemusing, informative, provocative and always interesting.--Kathleen McBroom Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

Lucid answers to a wide variety of topical questions.Standage (Go Figure: Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know, 2016, etc.), deputy editor of the Economist, gathers posts from that magazine's blogs, conveying facts, charts, tables, and theories in pithy responses to more than 100 quirky and often genuinely perplexing questions. Organized into 10 sections, the posts focus on global habits (why the exorcism business is booming in France, for example); love, sex, and marriage (attitudes to same-sex relationships around the world); food and drink (how wine glasses have gotten bigger over the years); science and health (what people want at the end of life); technology (what do robots do all day?); games (why tennis players grunt); language (how the letters of the alphabet got their names); holidays (why Easter moves around so much); and, not surprisingly, economics (does longevity always increase with national wealth?). Some of the answers are surprising, others self-evident. Why are Chinese children born in the year of the dragon more successful? Those born in the dragon years "are thought to be destined for success," so "parents believe in them," making success "a self-fulfilling prophecy." Why does Boko Haram prefer female suicide bombers? Shock value. Why are yurts going out of style in Mongolia? Mongolians, it seems, "are heeding the siren song of modern living." What's the easiest way to get rich in America? Be born to extremely rich parents. Many responses distill solid research and convey interesting information, such as the complex genome of wheat and the causes and consequences of Swedes' predilection to overpay taxes. As to the question about tennis players' grunts, it seems that "the speed of their serves and ground-strokes increased by 4-5% when they groaned," most likely caused by "the extra tension created in the athlete's core muscles by the grunt."A lively compendium of fun and facts. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.