As much as I enjoyed A.J. Jacobs' newest book, The Year of Living Biblically, I think that it doesn't hold a candle to the book that preceded it: The Know-It-All. After reading these two books, along with a handful of his articles for Esquire (he's the magazine's Editor at Large), I've developed such an appreciation for the man that I am currently debating ordering one of his older works, The Two Kings: Jesus and Elvis, which analyzes the eerie similarities between the two figures. That I'm even considering ordering such a bizarre book stands as the ultimate testament to Jacobs' charm and wit.
As you may recall, in The Year of Living Biblically Jacobs set out to live an entire year of his life in as strict accordance with the Bible as he could. As devoted as this may seem, two years earlier he did something just as impressive (or crazy, depending on how you look at it): he spent nearly a year reading, from A to Z, the entire 2002 edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Consider that the Britannica contains 33,000 pages comprised of 44 millions words, and you'll realize that this is no moderate undertaking. For Jacobs, this was getting up at five o'clock and reading for five hours before starting work...every single day for nearly a year. Jacobs describes his journey as "one man's quest to become the smartest person in the world," which, if you're of the camp that believes the pure accumulation of facts makes one smart, then Jacobs may not have been altogether ridiculous for making this statement (at the time of his reading, there was only one other person in the world--according to official Britannica spokespeople--who was also reading the whole edition from A to Z, a Chinese man who in fact was reading at a much slower pace). And as Jacobs was reading, he was also writing a memoir of the experience.
I know what you're thinking: how is this a book? The structure is somewhat similar to the Britannica itself, in that it is organized from A to Z with Jacobs discussing entries from the encyclopedia that he finds particularly interesting or noteworthy. Speckled throughout, however, is a wonderful narrative of a year in the man's life. Through his quest for knowledge he establishes a bond with his father that he had long since lost, competes on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?, tries in earnest to impregnate his seemingly barren wife, and, almost accidentally, writes an interesting essay on the nature of intelligence. It's all much more compelling that one might expect, so much so that the rights to the book have been bought in hopes that it will become a film.
What the book is, though, is perhaps the most well written bathroom book of all time. I mean this in the most complimentary way possible. Its entry style allows for quick, short reading. It's a book that can be read multiple times over, purely for the wealth of information that is crammed into it. If you're in the mood for an interesting, probably quirky fact you can use to titillate at a cocktail party, just pick this book up, flip to a random page and you're good to go. I'll open to a few random pages, just as an example.
Philo Farnsworth, creator of the television, broadcast the first TV image in 1927: a dollar sign. He couldn't have come up with a more appropriate image for his invention. As Jacobs quips, "Somehow, deep down, Farnsworth knew that Lisa Kudrow would earn $1 million per episode for singing songs about her smelly cat."
Sylvester Graham, the inventor of the graham cracker, was a health nut in his day who preached the virtues of hard mattresses, cold showers, and homemade bread. This last one actually caused him to be attacked by rioting bakers.
The three largest social units in the history of the world are, in order: desert locusts, pigeons, and the modern day Chinese. Seriously.
John Stewart said it best when he had Jacobs on The Daily Show. He said "The Know-It-All is a hilarious book and quite an impressive achievement. I've always said, why doesn't someone put out a less complete version of the encyclopedia? Well done, A. J."