In this caffeine-induced, jet-fuelled, celebrity-a-minute world, what you need is instant information.
Life in Five Seconds takes over 200 important events, inventions, great lives, wonders of the natural world and cultural icons... and then cuts away all the useless details.
A week ago when I was ill and felt like doing nothing, my sister brought over this book at night and we both poured over it and pretty soon I forgot that my whole body ached and I felt like shit. It's a very quick and fun read and even though our interpretations of the illustrated stories were (most of the times) way off the point, I had a really good time with Life in Five Seconds.
If this is what coffee table books are like, I think I want more of them.
i secondi che si impiegano per decrittare le immagini danno la misura dell'editing ancora necessario alle nostre sinapsi. (alcune sequenze sono geniali).
I have loved this book so much that after buying a paper copy, I recently bough the kindle version too. Very creative, and the power of this is in its simplicity and brevity of pictures.
This book appeared as if out of nowhere on a recent shopping trip, and I picked it up for a steal (after being haunted by it for a week or so). The creators at graphics studio H-57, Matteo Civaschi and Gianmarco Milesi, set out to tell a handful of historically important life stories in quickly digestible 'infograms,' and posted those online. The idea stuck, expanded and eventually evolved into this book, which goes beyond those initial characters (Hitler, Jesus, Michael Jackson, Marie Antoinette, Julius Caesar and Napoleon) to figures famous, infamous and pop-culturally trivial, as well as including historic sites & events and pop-culture phenomena. For the most part, the images work well, combining timeline direction with language-free instruction-manual simplicity. If there are times that it fails, it's largely because it comes to close to contemporary popularity and away from any sense of historicity (seriously, in 10 years will anyone remember 'Posh & Becks'?). Life in Five Seconds is a fun book to have lying around somewhere that it could be easily picked up and perused by company (though some of the graphics get a bit racy and/or violent), and its original cover price (£9.99) isn't even unreasonable (though I wouldn't have paid it). However, for something to live in one's library, it would almost immediately outlive its usefulness.
“The Short Story of Absolutely Everything” vat zo’n 200 gebeurtenissen, uitvindingen, personen en films samen in een paar icoontjes. Voor wie weinig tijd, een onstilbare honger naar kennis, of een korte aandachtsspanne heeft ;)
This is a witty, inspiring book that is actually more suited to group perusal than reading alone. Each of the infographics is imaginatively put together, and after practicing a few times one can catch on to the style. I can think of so many applications that would suit this perfectly; I'd particualrly like to see someone turn this into an ongoing app/tumbler that could be used for game nights. I really, really liked this concept and I hope to see more from these two.
Not what I was expecting, but a fun book. Reading it feels a bit like a trivia quiz! There are some beauts in here and I can already envision nicking some of the ideas and using them as a quiz at work.
Creative, Smart, and so simple. Love it كتاب مبدع وبسيط وخلاق بطريقة عرضه وأفكاره .. نصيحة لكل مبدع ان يتصفحه .. لأن لا أظن أن مصطلح "يقرأه" واردة مع هذا الكتاب