From zero to infinity, The Book of Numbers opens up a new world of knowledge based on the magic of numbers. Within these pages, every number of significance is listed together with its special qualities and associations. Along the way, there are many detours and diversions as well as detailed box-outs which help throw further light on every number that counts. This book is a sequence of numbers, starting from zero and working forward, all presented in a fascinating and fun fashion.
Numbers have occupied human thoughts since man first realized he had not one opposable thumb but two. And from simple enumeration they have grown to be the most important and universal language there is. This book highlights the dominant role that numbers play in everyday life, as well as exploring how numbers and number systems evolved, and delving into the mysteries of mankind's most powerful numbers. From algebra to astrology, music to mythology, from religion to recreation and from science to superstition, The Book of Numbers embraces this infinitely broad subject and puts it all in order—beginning with 0.
Tim has been writing professionally since 1985, when he became a wide-eyed journalist on a music magazine. He went on to work for various consumer magazines, including More, Auto Express, Top Gear and Match of the Day, which he launched as editor in 1996. He wrote his first book, A Game of Two Halves - Football Yesterday and Today, in 2002 and has since written over 30 non-fiction titles on everything from football to the English language. In 2018 he self-published Word of the Week: Volume One, his first foray into self-publishing.
A fun , if at times mind boggling read. Who knew that 70 was a "weird number" for some reason I am still trying to fathom out? Or that a billion and it's successors relate to different quantities in Europe and the USA? And who on earth wants to join the "Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search" and why....? Then there's the whole barcode controversy.....
Right at the end of the book I come across a term I had long ago consigned to "useless information I once trotted out in exams..... " Avogadro's number" or constant. I would respectfully suggest that anybody reading this review who knows what that is, without first looking it up, might benefit from getting out more..... (Unless you are a actually a chemist and actively using it in your work... But even then....)
Much of the early section of this book would greatly enliven maths lessons and help to motivate some able students who nevertheless struggle with computation.. One doesn't have to understand it to appreciate it....
The book of numbers, as well as demonstrating many amazing number facts is also a book that seeks to break down the boundaries between subjects and encourages the reader to think out of the box. Tim Glynne-Jones has kindly done a lot of the hard work of this by signposting to people, places and history.
Kind of quirky and interesting but lots of misquoted cliches, typos and some just plain incorrect info made it kind of frustrating. Reads like a Google doc that someone has been tossing anecdotes into for years. Could definitely use another run through by an editor BUT overall it was pretty entertaining.
This kind of book is right in my wheel house, but I was disappointed with the book. The credibility of the information was called into question when I came across the first mistake. The second mistake ruined the rest of the book for me. I kept wonder which other 'facts' were wrong. Also, I agree with another reviewer that using song titles and lyrics to fill out the content seems like a lazy way out.
I learned the background to Thousand Island Dressing. The number 100 is the total of the first ten odd numbers and also the first nine prime numbers. This book is a collection of mathematics and folklore about numbers.
I thought this book would be more mathematical than it was. While it does talk some about the mathematical significance of some numbers, the majority of the book is just random facts having to do with the number in question. I found myself many times wondering why some of the information was even being shared because it was totally worthless. At least for someone hoping for more math.