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The Toothpick: Technology and Culture

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Like The Pencil, Henry Petroski’s The Toothpick is a celebration of a humble yet elegant device. As old as mankind and as universal as eating, this useful and ubiquitous tool finally gets its due in this wide-ranging and compulsively readable book. Here is the unexpected story of the simplest of implements—whether made of grass, gold, quill, or wood—a story of engineering and design, of culture and class, and a lesson in how to discover the extraordinary in the ordinary.

Petroski takes us back to ancient Rome, where the emperor Nero makes his entrance into a banquet hall with a silver toothpick in his mouth; and to a more recent time in Spain, where a young señorita uses the delicately pointed instrument to protect her virtue from someone trying to steal a kiss. He introduces us to Charles Forster, a nineteenth-century Bostonian and father of the American toothpick industry, who hires Harvard students to demand toothpicks in area restaurants—thereby making their availability in eating establishments as expected as condiments.

And Petroski takes us inside the surprisingly secretive toothpick-manufacturing industry, in which one small town’s factories can turn out 200 million wooden toothpicks a day using methods that, except for computer controls, haven’t changed much in almost 150 years. He also explores a treasure trove of the toothpick’s unintended uses and perils, from sandwiches to martinis and beyond.

With an engineer’s eye for detail and a poet’s flair for language, Petroski has earned his reputation as a writer who explains our world—from the tallest buildings to the lowliest toothpick—to us.

464 pages, Hardcover

First published October 16, 2007

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391 people want to read

About the author

Henry Petroski

35 books261 followers
Henry Petroski was an American engineer specializing in failure analysis. A professor both of civil engineering and history at Duke University, he was also a prolific author.

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5 stars
19 (15%)
4 stars
35 (28%)
3 stars
36 (29%)
2 stars
28 (22%)
1 star
4 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Ben Russell.
59 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2023
More of a 3.5 than a 4, but I'll give it the benefit of the doubt because it's a very niche book and I like niche books.

Overall, a very good and thorough rundown of the history of the toothpick. The book meanders back and forth through the technology and industry to the social implications of the toothpick. It seems the toothpick's heyday was the mid to late 1800s, and this is where the book focuses. It's interesting to see how the toothpick had fallen in and out of favor several times over those decades, as well as the fierce competition between manufacturers, creating a patent war that today's patent trolls would be envious of.

My biggest criticism of the book is the incredibly in-depth analysis of the Charles Forster estate's finances. I'm sure someone will really appreciate this analysis, but I found it to be dry and of minimal value to the book. I also struggled at times to understand how the machinery manufactured the various styles of toothpicks, having only the most modern understanding of the toothpick. The book provides patent diagrams, but these are often useless for understanding how the machines actually work.
Profile Image for Noel.
480 reviews31 followers
July 29, 2008
you might not want to read this if you're going to read the book (it's actually all the best parts condensed into one page), but i suggest you DON'T read the book, so read on!

the best quote:
"With a toothpick, what we see is what we've got- inside a toothpick in the same wood that we see on the outside." (and this one didn't come until chapter 16. i feel that if that sentence was even necessary, perhaps it should have been placed closer to the intro)

best anecdote of the book:
"One of these packers may have been the 'Maine girl' who once inserte a note with her address into one of the boxes, 'requesting the finder to write to her'. A man from Kansas City did write, and the ensuing correspondence led to his traveling east 'to see if the young lady was the sort of a woman he wanted for a wife.'

best randomly inserted bit of information:
(talking about patented toothpick dispensers) "Some dispensers are more dynamic; they have hidden mechanisms that activate moving animals to deliver one toothpick at a time...A dispenser patented in 1913...took the form of a stork, whose beak was a "resilient bifurcated stem,"which is patent-talk for something like a flexible two-pronged fork. A plunger caused the body of the stork to pivot about its legs and dip its beak into a receptacle full of toothpicks. In order to have it retrieve one in its bill, the stem/fork had to be attached sideways, somewhat like the cockeyed stuck landing gear of the JetBlue airliner that had to make an emergency landing at the Los Angeles airport in 2005"
aHAHAHAHAHA

best chapters of the book:
--18 New Uses for Old which describes other manners in which toothpicks have been used (escaping from prison for example)
--27 The Fatal Martini which describes ways people have died from the toothpick. not actually as interesting as it sounds, but a heck of a lot more riveting than the rest...
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jaime.
161 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2008
This book wasn't bad. Considering it's subject matter, I actually breezed through it, learning a lot about toothpicks, patents, and business practices in the past. I really want to try a Brazilian rosewood hand-carved toothpick now!
Profile Image for John.
708 reviews
October 2, 2012
I know more about toothpicks than any sane person has the right to know - The first couple of chapters were the best in my opinion - early uses.
Profile Image for Tim.
11 reviews
April 29, 2016
Most boring book I have ever read! Paint drying would be more exciting. This book could have been ten pages long and accomplished the same thing.
Profile Image for Jeff Siperly.
95 reviews3 followers
November 5, 2020
Finished reading. 354 pages. Only paid $2.50 for it. Took me way too long to finish.

I now know EVERYTHING there is to know about toothpicks. All the people involved with toothpicks. All the types of woods, and other materials, to make toothpicks. All the ways toothpicks can be deadly/hurtful. All the shapes of toothpicks.
I’ll probably forget about 85% of what I now know about toothpicks within the next week. But, yeah, kinda interesting.

Kinda.
Profile Image for Eileen Pace.
54 reviews18 followers
May 11, 2018
Read this with your tongue in your cheek. Unless you really do want to know about the making, technology, history and culture of the toothpick.
Profile Image for Kyle.
149 reviews5 followers
July 29, 2016
I'm not sure what I expected from this book, but I didn't find it. I think I was looking for broader lessons about technology and culture that more broadly applied to society, but those weren't present at all. Instead, this book is simply a very, very comprehensive history of the toothpick. But sometimes that history feels needlessly long. For instance, one of the Forster heirs moves to San Diego. That part is fine - but then he spends time telling us the brief history of someone with the same last name who already lived in San Diego, but wasn't important in any other way.

Overall, this is the type of book that I'm glad has been written, but not one I'm glad to have read. It's an impressive big of research - digging up a 1910's forestry graduate thesis as a source material, for instance - but I just don't need to know this much about toothpicks.
Profile Image for Dave.
192 reviews12 followers
September 6, 2008
An exhaustive (and frankly, exhausting) look at the toothpick throughout history. Petroski is skilled at looking at common objects with an engineer's eyes. He is able to discuss the technology that helps make an object common in the first place (consistent, affordable reproduction) and the cultural impetus which makes a society value the effort to invest in that technology. When that happens an object becomes, almost paradoxically, common and iconic at the same time.

Just too much toothpick lore after a bit. I mean, the book starts with the fossilized teeth of early humans...and doesn't stop there. However, if you are interested in the intersection of technology with culture, I think you'd like this book.
Profile Image for Cassie.
189 reviews
September 24, 2015
Book #18 completed for Book Riot Challenge: "A Microhistory"
I've always been curious to the origins of the toothpicks, given that I take handfuls from every dining establishment that offers them and keep them with me. So it was very interesting learning of the history and manufacturing and such, but the book itself read like a liberal arts college student's term paper on a subject that doesn't relate at all to their major. There was a lot of research involved, sure, but the writing style seemed to be forced together to connect thoughts and quotes and relevancy.
82 reviews
October 5, 2014
It's hard to describe the ideal reader for this book. It has a lot of history, which I found interesting, but it also some engineering-related descriptions that I found difficult to follow (more pictures would have been nice). I also found a little redundant at times and thought he could have left out some of the detail. But it's certainly different and had lot of interesting information, and you can't deny his enthusiasm for the subject.
Profile Image for Philbeert.
147 reviews11 followers
November 2, 2015
I can't help but question if this is a book-worthy subject. It really just felt like a way too long research paper with some interesting or amusing factoids thrown in. I love a toothpick and will continue to use them for numerous tasks in addition to their designated purpose but this book just wasn't necessary.
Profile Image for Phil Breidenbach.
55 reviews
November 20, 2013
While he did come up with some interesting facts and stories about...toothpicks, there really is only "so much" I need to know about them. I have to hand it to Henry for his fact finding skills. I have read a couple of his books, The Pencil, a lot like this one, and The Book on the Bookshelf, a book I could really relate to!
This book was so-so...
Profile Image for Coral.
222 reviews3 followers
July 20, 2008
It wasn't bad ... It was just much, much more in-depth than I needed it to be. I was looking for something with more of a How It's Made bent than a full-blown history book.
Profile Image for Emily.
452 reviews30 followers
Want to read
April 6, 2009
What are the chances that my library will actually have a book that is exclusively about toothpicks? Also, what are the odds that you could have a friend who is nerdy enough to be interested in a book exclusively about toothpicks?
Profile Image for Rachel.
153 reviews2 followers
April 7, 2010
Books that explore a particular common object within its cultural, historical, and technological context are popular right now. It's quite interesting when done properly. Unfortunately, this book was both exhaustive and exhausting. I would have liked it better at half the size, I think.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
61 reviews8 followers
Want to read
December 1, 2007
Dr. Petroski has written a number of books on the design of everyday objects. I'm particularly interested in this because Maine was the toothpick capital of the world at one time!
Profile Image for Alan Perry.
14 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2009
Lots of interesting points made in a disconnected and uninteresting manner.
3 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2008
A little disappointing. I loved his "The Pencil" and most of the rest of his work. According my wife they're all part of my "Boring Book of the Month" club but this one got really dry, even for me.
Profile Image for Steve.
2 reviews
November 12, 2008
How could you resist learning everything there is to know (in appropriately minute detail) about the genesis and bright future of the toothpick?
Profile Image for Jen.
28 reviews5 followers
February 9, 2013
I should have assumed that an object so commonly used would have such a rich history with such interesting stories.
313 reviews
April 12, 2013
I often thought I was a victim of an elaborate practical joke designed to see who would actually finish the book, but I love Petrovsky's writing and I marvel at the thoroughness of his research.
Profile Image for Corey.
3 reviews
May 18, 2015
Sigh, after 60 pages of aimless meandering thru various anecdotes (all of which are vaguely connected at best) about toothpicks...yeah, I'm bored (and done).
Profile Image for Cheri.
23 reviews1 follower
Read
November 19, 2016
Petroski can find fascinating details in darn near anything, so I shouldn't have been surprised at how enjoyable this exploration of the humble toothpick was.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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