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All Facts Considered: The Essential Library Of Inessential Knowledge (2010)

by Kee Malesky(Favorite Author)
3.4 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
0470559659 (ISBN13: 9780470559659)
languge
English
publisher
Wiley
review 1: Plastic Soup? Fullerenes and Buckyballs? Giant Meat Flowers? Talk about useless knowledge, this book is full of it! Resting somewhere between the Guinness Book of World’s Records and Ripley’s Believe It or Not, comes “All Facts Considered: The Essential Library of Inessential Knowledge,” a lightweight compendium of oddities and curiosities that will alternatively bore you or boggle the mind (depending on the topic) if you’re not careful.In dividing this ‘knowledge’ into three sections (Memory and History, Reason and Science, and Imagination, Poetry and Art), Malesky, an NPR research librarian, has assembled answers to questions you may have never thought to ask. For instance, do you know the difference between i.e. and e.g.? Or when National Dog Bite Preventi... moreon Week occurs? Or when Elvis last ‘left the building’? All this as well as zip code trivia, Shakespearian obscurities and the fact that the U.S. Army once used camels in the desert Southwest when horses and mules couldn’t take the heat, are all here for the taking – or leaving.Of course, most people are able to live their lives without worrying about such mundane and trivial matters, but if you need an inventory of some unusual info-morsels before your next cocktail party outing, you may want to bone up on a few of these juicy trivial tidbits. At 206 pages, it shouldn’t take long.
review 2: This book is written by my colleague Kee Malesky who patiently answered my question about 'how the book writing was going' every time I saw her at work. I really enjoyed reading the introduction to the book. Kee highlights main reasons on why us librarians are librarians. Often times Kee's name is the librarian named on the air, but she was gracious in the introduction and acknowledgments to recognize the team of librarians that NPR has.Instead of pulling out facts included in the book that I found interesting, I'm going to post some questions that were asked of Kee for the DC/SLA chapter newsletter. Read the book - it's witty and interesting and you'll learn something. But I want to share more about the great librarian and person behind the book as well. You’ve been a librarian at NPR for over 20 years can you tell us how NPR has changed over the decades and how that’s affected your job? I've seen NPR evolve from land lines and typewriters to satellites and computers. NPR has always been on the cutting edge of technological developments, and the library has been an integral part of that -- creating in-house databases to document our programs and make the material easily available, providing desktop research tools to the staff, maintaining current awareness of changes in commercial and primary sources so we are constantly improving the service we provide. In all your years at NPR what’s the assignment or accomplishment you’re most proud of? I would probably say I'm most proud of the briefing books we produce for national elections and other events. They used to be massive 800+ page volumes, and now we can provide the same info on our News Wiki in ways that are even more flexible and useful than the print editions. I'm currently starting a project that could make me very proud -- creating an Audio Pronunciation Guide. Can you walk us through the process of writing the book? After you thought of writing it what happened next? What was the most challenging part of the process? I wrote a brief proposal, which included an essay about facts and what they mean and how they change (that became the Introduction to the book). Once it was accepted by the publisher, I arranged to take some time off from NPR and started on the research. Most of the facts in the book are not from actual questions I have answered at the NPR Reference Desk, but I did look through dozens of my old reference desk notebooks for queries that involved interesting facts. I carried a little notebook and pencil everywhere I went, to write down ideas as I found them. Much of the research was done online -- using commercial databases; government, academic and association websites; and online library resources. I also made several visits to the DC Public Library and to the Library of Congress. I collected as many reputable sources as I needed to compile the essential details of each fact, then I tried to tell its story in a couple of paragraphs. It took about six months to research and write. Once the editor accepted the manuscript, I worked with production and copy-editors until we were all satisfied with the final product. I turned in the final Index at the beginning of September.Check out Kee's website for more interviews and listings of her sources for the book as well. less
Reviews (see all)
nabz
Fascinating potpourri of facts. I read it in the bedroom but good for bathroom reading too!
Judy
An interesting small book of inessential facts.
Dena
Didn't finish because it was due at the library
bill
Fun little 'did you know?' book.
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