Author:John D. Barrow
'If people do not believe that mathematics is simple, it is only because they do not realize how complicated life is.' John von Neumann
Mathematics can tell you things about the world that can't be learned in any other way. This hugely informative and wonderfully entertaining Brain Shot answers a few essential questions about existence. It unravels the knotty, clarifies the conundrums and sheds light into dark corners. From winning the lottery, financial investment with Time Travellers and the weirdest football match ever to Sherlock Holmes, Elections, game theory, drunks, packing for your holiday and the madness of crowds; from chaos to infinity and everything in between, Essential Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know has all the answers!
BRAIN SHOTS: The byte-sized guide to all the things you didn't know you didn't know...
As people are saying on Twitter, this is a really smart idea. I'm not yet convinced by 'enhanced' ebooks, but I am immediately won over by the idea of abbreviated digital books, that can condense a big book/idea into a 'brain shot'. This to me speaks to how we read digitally, in short and fast jump-shots: or at least it is how I read digitally!
—— futurebook.comFascinating
—— ScotsmanWhat makes Roth such an important novelist is the effortless way he brings together the trivial and the profoundly serious
—— IndependentA masterful performance
—— SpectatorNemesis is an artfully constructed suspenseful novel with a cunning twist
—— J.M. CoetzeeThe genius of Philip Roth...back at his imperious best in this heartbreaking tale... The eloquence of Roth's storytelling makes Nemesis one of his most haunting works
—— Daily MailCantor is one of Roth's best creations and the atmosphere of terror is masterfully fashioned
—— Tibor Fischer , Sunday TelegraphVery fine, very unsettling
—— Douglas Kennedy , The TimesA perfectly proportioned Greek tragedy played out against the background of the polio epidemic that swept Newark, New Jersey, during the summer of 1944
—— Adrian Turpin , Financial TimesOutstanding
—— Sunday TimesA 2011 favourite
—— Wendy Cope , Observer, Books of the YearThe year's most unusual travel book
[An] eye-opening and hugely enjoyable book
—— Daily TelegraphWritten in a delectable prose that scatters flashes of poetry over a sardonic undertow of social comment, Edgelands is a lyrical triumph. On Britain’s grotty margins, the duo trace “desire paths” to find beauty and mystery in the rough darkness on the edge of town
—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent