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The Phone Book: The Curious History Of The Book That Everyone Uses But No One Reads (2010)

by Ammon Shea(Favorite Author)
3.42 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
0399535934 (ISBN13: 9780399535932)
languge
English
publisher
Perigee Trade
review 1: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. it is filled with quirky tidbits about the phone book, of course, but also about about the telegraph, the phone itself and an array of people. I enjoyed the author's anecdotes; I felt like I was talking to a friend about his dissertation. I don't quite understand why so many people complained about the tangents.. I'm a firm believer that if you want to only know facts you should read an encyclopedia.
review 2: When I'm in school I primarily read for school (of course) and books from my wishlist and my personal to be read collection. But I'm not perfect and since most of my reading material comes from the library, I'm constantly tempted by the new books on display right near the circulation desk.I'm a sucker for unusual nonfiction
... more. I like to read the books on topics you wouldn't think had been written about. A prime example is The Phone Book by Ammon Shea.The phone book is one of those tools that has been part of the telephone culture since shortly after the telephone was first being introduced. At first they were marketing tools to show off the early adopters. They were also aids to help the telephone switchboard operators keep track of a ballooning subscriber list. Later as the telephone became a ubiquitous tool, everyone needed a copy. Now a days with smart phones being minicomputers, the telephone directories are online and there are movements to do away with the printed versions.Shea's book covers most of the history of the different uses of both types of telephone books: the residential (white) pages and the business (yellow) pages. He even explains how the yellow pages came to be yellow. He explains the pre-l33tspeak language of the phone book and how it was developed to save space. Just imagine those same phone books without the abbreviations; they'd be a long as Shea's other reading project, the OED.Beyond the history and mechanics of the phone book, Shea includes chapters about collectors of the book, people who change their name to be placed either at the beginning or the end of the book, and the strong men who rip the things in half. There are so many sundry details, tangents and other goodies that I couldn't put the book down once I started it. less
Reviews (see all)
essykart22
Interesting book. Well researched and fascinating facts but really dense and overly boring.
matie
Absolutely and utterly fascinating and engrossing.
Jim
Like A J Jacobs. Cool
anj
Fun and informative.
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