How To Invent Everything
J**G
Wonderful Book
I love this book. It is one of the most interesting books I ever read. I wish I had read it before embarking on my college studies in physics (BA) and engineering (PhD). No one should graduate High School without reading it. It motivates interest in all kinds of subjects. I am amazed at what this author has put together. Bravo!!
D**S
One of my Top 5 books to rebuild civilzation with.
Great book, I gave it to my children and they have started two new civilizations using it. One of them just passed the Bronze age!
K**S
LOOOOONG wait but worth it!
Shipping took months, but the book is very amusing. I get a chuckle just out of the table of context and have shared the book with several of my curious friends. I will probably buy more copies for my friends--just buy them months in advance.
V**Y
Fun book
It is a fun way to learn about history
R**L
Fun, witty, and you’ll probably learn something.
Ryan has done the impossible: got me to read and enjoy a nonfiction book. This is no small feat. If I’m reading nonfiction, then I’m learning something, and that is a big no thank you from me. I didn’t spend 6 years and barely graduate college to keep on learning stuff afterwards like a chump.Ryan sat down and thought to himself “How do I get Robert to read and enjoy my book that’s the history of human technological achievement? I know, I’ll create a framing device that posits that this book is actually a manual for a time traveler who is stranded in the past!” And it worked (crafty bastard).I absolutely recommend picking this book up. It’s fun, witty, and you will certainly learn something (even if it’s begrudgingly like me).
T**O
Fun and informative.
This review originally appeared in Volume 68, Number 4, November 2021 issue of Technical Communication.Time travel is a common and popular theme in both literature and film. From H.G. Wells to Back to the Future, people have imagined how time travel could work and alter their lives, perhaps by travelling to the past to make a sound investment or place a winning bet on a sporting event. However, very few sources center on travelling through time with the intention of inventing everything and explain to you how to do so. Humorist Ryan North, perhaps best known for his Dinosaur Comics, wears the hat of a technical communicator and presents a fun, but serious look at how to re-create the modern world if you are stranded in the past, in How to Invent Everything: A Survival Guide for the Stranded Time Traveler.The book’s framing narrative is that you are a time traveler stranded in the past, reading the time machine repair guide. In the likely event that you cannot fix the time machine, you’ll have to build modern society from scratch, with the guide’s help. While this sounds fantastical in concept, it sets the tone for what is essentially a reference book on discovering everything, from breeding dogs from wolves, to creating charcoal to filter water, to composing “Ode to Joy” with your name on the manuscript.In the introductions, North credits a technical writer (himself in another timeline) with creating the book’s content. Accordingly, much of the content is relatively technical in nature, although explained so any common person/stranded time traveler can follow along and understand. Each section lists the invention, a relevant quote about it, a description, what people did without it before it was invented, when it was invented, the prerequisites of inventing it, and how to invent it. For example, without inventing glass you would not have corrective lenses or microscopes. To invent it no prerequisite inventions are needed unless you want to make artificial glass. Next, not only instructions on how to create glass are provided, but also how to form glass into useful objects, such as a telescope. Footnotes help flesh out the process and add levity to the content.After reading How to Invent Everything, you may not be ready to create a combustion engine from scratch, although all types of engines are described. Throughout what could be a dense encyclopedia of information, North sprinkles humorous observations and informative footnotes about actual history, such as the “wandering womb” theory from ancient Greece that persisted until the 1800s. The content reads like a high-level summary of what you would expect to learn in an overview course of just about everything, including basic chemistry to music composition to computer logic and the first 768 digits of pi for reference. For anyone who would like a general explanation of how the modern world works explained at a high school level, invent moveable type and bookbinding, pick up a copy of this book, warm up your flux capacitor, and prepare for a delightful travel through time.
J**M
Save your money
I had high hopes. Excellent premise but poorly executed. A vague generalized and rambling attempt to attack an interesting conjecture. Don't waste your money, not even an engaging bathroom book.
K**G
I feel like I am becoming a bit of a prepper. That's what the world is today.
This backs up some other survival products I am beginning to store.
T**N
Most useful guide for time-machine repair I ever read
The only problem with this book is that it makes me want to build a furnace in the garden. If you were ever interested in the tech-tree for civilization, this is for you!
N**M
Pretty good read
Loved the work and the style of writing. The tone of book was of a person sardonically explaining everything. Worth the week of reading.
T**3
Great book
I originally got this from the library but ended up buying a copy because of how good it was. The best book in this style of science and fun that I have read in ages.
B**A
良かったです。
Deliveryが遅かったが、ちゃんとしたものがきました、プレセントで買ったが、相手は喜んでいたので、安心した。
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