Reviews

Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words by Randall Munroe

awwcripes's review against another edition

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2.0

I was super stoked to get this from the library but ended up quickly annoyed and frustrated. The obstinate refusal to call anything by it's real name ended up feeling pretty fucking contrived and irritating. I love the author's comic and first book What If. This one though - - - I had to put it down. Looking forward to your next book Randall; it's ok to experiment.

wonky_noodle's review against another edition

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funny informative slow-paced

2.75

tsemoana's review against another edition

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2.0

I love XKCD, and Munroe's other book, What If?, is fantastic. But this was an exercise in frustration. Which is why it took me so fucking long to finish. He's not actually explaining stuff in simpler terms, he's replacing words with simple words. And then using those same simple words to explain. Making it so that if you don't know the topic of a page well (enough) there's so much that just isn't clear. I spent so much time mentally translating the text into actual terms that make sense, it just wasn't any fun to read. And that is what I expected from the book. Would have been better if he had not adhered so strictly to this set of words. And given actual terms to then explain in simpler words.

personarobot's review against another edition

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DNF @ 44% 

Terrible format as an eBook! The book feels like it's aimed at children more than adults. The simpler language makes it harder for me to actually understand what it's trying to explain. 

bailey_bea's review against another edition

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3.0

The concept for Things Explainer is an interesting one: explaining complicated ideas and machines using the 1000 most common words in the English language. While I did learn a few new things and enjoyed a few laughs, the book is better read as an experiment in and of itself. It challenges the reader to think differently about language and about everything around us, from our organs ("Bags of Stuff Inside You") to the Large Hadron Collider ("Big Tiny Things Hitter").

Overall, I'm glad I read the book, but I'm not really sure I'd recommend it. With its blueprints and tiny text, it takes forever to read. And though I learned a couple fascinating things from Things Explainer, it didn't equip me with the vocabulary to share my new knowledge. The terms are too simplistic to be helpful. In fact, their simplicity is often downright confusing!

If you're at a bookstore or library, pick it up and take a gander. But it's probably best to leave it on the shelf when you go.

totalum's review against another edition

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funny informative medium-paced

4.5

wooknight's review against another edition

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3.0

While I love the concept , I realized that it is actually a lot more effort to understand this book because I constantly needed to map the authors words into what I already knew. And it was not always easy . But I do think it is an excellent book for somebody very young and I already bought one for my 12 year nephew

lanceschaubert's review against another edition

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5.0

An engineer's handbook for the ignorant and the young. Wonderful way to get at concepts without bogging down in the jargon or acronyms — which, in a way, indicts the entire industry of naming complicated things in complicated ways to preserve the elitism of a few masters instead of proliferating expertise broadly.

This book fits more with the industrial revolution than it does in a world overrun by specialists.

rikerandom's review against another edition

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5.0

Diese und weitere Rezensionen findet ihr auf meinem Blog Anima Libri - Buchseele

Randall Munroe habe ich über seine Website xkcd und deren wahnsinnig schräge „What if“-Kategorie, in der der Physiker die absurdesten „Was wäre wenn…“-Fragen wissenschaftlich beantwortet. Das ganze gab es dann auch mal als Buch, „What if? Was wäre wenn?“, eine nette Idee, aber relativ überflüssig, wenn man Englisch kann und Internet hat Dafür erschien mir das neue Buch von Randall Munroe, „Der Dinge-Erklärer“, umso interessanter und das war es dann auch.

Das Buch ist eine schräge Mischung komplexer Blaupausen, der für xkcd typischen Strichmännchen-Comics und erklärenden Texten, die nur aus den 1.000 am häufigsten genutzten Wörtern bestehen (zumindest fast, denn die Übersetzter haben hier etwas geschummelt, dafür funktioniert der ganze Spaß dann aber auf Deutsch letztendlich genau so gut, wie im Original, da ist so ein bisschen künstlerische Freiheit schon okay ;)). Das macht die Erklärungen allerdings nicht unbedingt einfacher, denn die Umschreibungen und alternativen Namen, die der Autor sich ausdenkt, um die teilweise wirklich sehr komplexen Dinge zu erklären, sind größtenteils zwar enorm witzig, aber manchmal doch nicht ganz so leicht zu verstehen.

Gerade das macht dieses Buch allerdings so unterhaltsam, denn auch wenn es einen gewissen informativen Mehrwert hat und man sicherlich hier und da das eine oder andere dazulernen kann, ist es vor allem einfach sehr witzig. Das liegt natürlich nicht zuletzt an der Einstellung des Autors, der im Vorwort – der Seite, bevor das Buch richtig anfängt – erklärt, dass man einfach keine Angst haben darf, dumm zu klingen, wenn man mal auf die ganzen großen Wörter verzichtet, denn „wenn man Dinge wie ‚Weltraumboote‘ und ‚Wasserdrücker‘ sagt, klingt am Ende alles dumm.“ In dem Zusammenhang fand ich auch das Nachwort der Übersetzer sehr interessant.

Alles in allem ist „Der Dinge-Erklärer – Thing Explainer: Komplizierte Sachen in einfachen Worten“ von Randall Munroe ein unterhaltsamer Spaß, der die behandelten wissenschaftlichen Zusammenhänge zwar nicht unbedingt so viel einfacher, dafür aber deutlich unterhaltsamer darlegt. Ein großer Spaß für alle, die wissenschaftliche Zusammenhänge mal aus einem ganz neuen Blickwinkel betrachten möchten und dabei noch ein bisschen was lernen wollen.

xsleepyshadows's review against another edition

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2.0

I like the idea of complicated things explained simply without any jargon. That's what I expect more of the book to be like but you don't learn any actual names of anything. It is simply meant to be a silly book with nice diagrams.
Looking through this book is good for a laugh.