A COMPLETE REVISION AND THOROUGH UPDATING OF THE ULTIMATE REFERENCE FROM THE NEWSPAPER OF RECORD. A comprehensive guide offering insight and clarity on a broad range of even more essential subjects. Whether you are researching the history of Western art, investigating an obscure medical test, following current environmental trends, studying Shakespeare, brushing up on your crossword and Sudoku skills, or simply looking for a deeper understanding of the world, this book is for you. An indispensable resource for every home, office, dorm room, and library, this new edition of The New York Times Guide to Essential Knowledge offers in-depth explorations of art, astronomy, biology, business, economics, the environment, film, geography, history, the Internet, literature, mathematics, music, mythology, philosophy, photography, sports, theater, film, and many other subjects.This one volume is designed to offer more information than any other book on the most important subjects, as well as provide easy-to-access data critical to everyday life. It is the only universal reference book to include authoritative and engaging essays from New York Times experts in almost every field of endeavor.The New York Times Guide to Essential Knowledge provides information with matchless accuracy and exceptional clarity. This new revised and expanded third edition covers major categories with an emphasis on depth and historical context, providing easy access to data vital for everyday living.Covering nearly 50 major categories, and providing an immediate grasp of complex topics with charts, sidebars, and maps, the third edition features 50 pages of new material, including new sections on* Atheism * Digital Media* Inventions and Discoveries * Endangered Species* Inflation * Musical Theater* Book Publishing *Wikileaks*The Financial Crisis *Nuclear Weapons*Energy *The Global Food SupplyEvery section has been thoroughly updated, making this third edition more useful and comprehensive than ever. It informs, educates, answers, illustrates and clarifies---it's the only one-volume reference book you need.
The New York Times is a daily newspaper published in New York City and distributed internationally. Founded in 1851, the newspaper has won 112 Pulitzer Prizes, more than any other news organization. Its website receives 30 million unique visitors per month.
Since I'm attempting to get on Jeopardy, I decided that a wide review of knowledge was necessary, and so I picked the second edition of this book at a used bookstore. Well, I certainly don't recommend trying to read this cover to cover as I did. It's really not made for that sort of thing, though I can tell you this: some of the section writers are far better at others in providing an overview of their field of expertise, and more than a couple don't know how to take an ideologically neutral stance for the life of themselves (but being that this is sponsored by the New York Times, I was expecting such a bias to pop up).
That said, I did learn quite a bit of new factoids, as well as refresh what I already know.
I didn't read the entire thing because it's longer than the Bible, but a great reference for curious people to learn new facts daily. I just open the book to random pages, learn some interesting info for half an hour and close it till the next time. Did you know Japanese is spoken on the small island country of Palau? Now I do thanks to this book!
This is a great book, together with "An Incomplete Education", this is my go to reference when I want to learn about a certain topic. I haven't read it from cover to cover, I just zoom in on the topic I want to learn about. Has served me very well so far.
Love having this resource -- one I can dip into and out of as I hear or read something and want more background on it. Everything from the government to literary arts to science -- can't even remember all the topics!
Wonderful resource and so glad I have it on my Kindle for quick reference.
Obviously, this book is large. I read a few pages each day and learned a little bit about...everything! I started it during COVID lock down and finally finished, and picked up some very interesting facts, music selections, classic book ideas, etc. along the way. If you are curious and love to learn, you'll find this very comprehensive.
I was surprised having put this on reserve at my library to come and find that it was a master collection of knowledge, 10+ times the usual length of books I normally tag as "to-reference". I'll definitely be finding an e-book/pdf version of this to reference instead.
Cover to cover? Nay nay. Reference books are fun and this one is one of the funnest. Some errant info/sourcing, so worth double checking things for full context.
i didn't read the whole thing because its like a DICTIONARY. this thing is huge. its not a book were you read the whole thing but you could try if you really wanted to.
This was a truly a massive collection of trivial knowledge on a vast area of topics. Not deep enough in all areas obviously but a good high level over view of a wide swatch of areas of knowledge.