Book Review: Pick Me Up by Jeremy Leslie and David Roberts

Pick Me Up is an incredible reference geared towards helping people answer those pressing questions like, “How are things related?” and what exactly is an “emirp”?

The book is divided up into eight areas of expertise, color-coded for convenience. The book suggests that you start anywhere, so I did. I opened up to a page at random (pg. 186-187) where I read about religion, specifically “Religion: Islam to India” which covered Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sikhism. There were brief descriptions that comprised the bottom third of the pages. The top portion was taken up by pictures which included images of holy sites such as Mecca, The Golden Temple in Amritsar and the River Ganges as well as photographs of items of importance/interest to the different religions.

From there, I followed a reference to “forever” in the book that took me to page 249 which asked the question, “What time is it?” This section had a number of questions that it answered in the same blurby style as before, with a brief description and some small illustrations. There was more said on this page than on the religion page, but then, with “time,” what sort of illustrations could you show? (Sundials, clocks and calendars, if you were curious.) There was a bit about “when time began” which briefly discussed the different calendars that have been in use. This contained a reference to Latin, so I jumped to page 54.

Here I found interesting little tidbits on some of the world’s languages. For example, Ecclesiastical Latin is an official Language in Vatican City, even if everyone uses Italian. I did not know that. From there, I went to page 96 on colonization (not surprisingly referenced in a blurb on the English language). I then spent the next hour and a half surfing through the 352-page book, moving from one topic to the next, covering everything from numbers to art, then to how to tell stories, the ancient Greeks, democracy, I Ching, and world literature. (I am more than a little embarrassed to admit, having graduated from high school one town away from the National Czech and Slovak Museum, that I did not know where Franz Kafka was from.) A few more hours with this volume, and I will be queen of the pub quiz.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2

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Article Author: Katharine Donelson

Katharine Donelson is a student of Linguistics, Communication and Welsh. She currently lives with her formerly feral cat and spends her time learning Welsh vocabulary, listening to music, watching films, photographing the local scenery and maintaining her blog The Film Noir Experience. …

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  • 1 - Natalie Bennett

    Nov 02, 2006 at 5:32 pm

    This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!

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