The Areas of My Expertise 174
Hemos writes "Most of the books sent to Slashdot for review have words like
"Java", "hacks", or "802.11b" in the title, but occasionally an odd
general book arrives after a publicist hits the wrong button on the
keyboard. At first, I thought that John Hodgman's The Areas of
My Expertise , was a mistake, but now I'm not sure. Because
this is Slashdot, I'll spend the rest of the review wondering
whether the Internet is really changing jokes, humor in general,
and even all narrative form. But before that, I can tell you now
that there's something sly, odd, and very funny about the book even
though it is little more than a disconnected collection of lists
and details. It's a coredump from a mind filled with 700 names of
Hobos, the ways to use a ferret to rob a bank, the secret to
winning every fight (use henchmen!), and the first draft of T.R.
Roosevelt's famous command: speak softly and pierce their eyes with
a golden hook." Read on for Peter Wayner's review.
The Areas of My Expertise | |
author | John Hodgman |
pages | 230 |
publisher | |
rating | 8 |
reviewer | Peter Wayner |
ISBN | |
summary |
Let me help the curiosity of the general reader before I get to the meat of the review where I reveal enough Internet-releated theories to satisfy the nasty trolls who like to wonder why Slashdot is wasting valuable bits on silly topic. As John Hodgeman is fond of promising on his book's cover: "THE ANSWER IS PROVIDED".
The book is said to be a relatively complete collection of all of the important expertise in the mind of John Hodgeman, the author referred to on the cover as "A PROFESSIONAL WRITER." There's one section that contains the "700 Hobo names you requested." ("Irontrousers the Strong", "Fleastick" are 55 and 79). Another includes random crap about the 50 states. The sections are all very silly and the humor emerges from a form of metaphysical misdirection. I still chuckle when I think about the list of jokes that "have never produced laughter." The jokes really aren't funny, but there's something insane in their very deliberate and plodding failure.
The book can be sampled like a box of chocolates. I tried to read it through directly to see if any grand arc emerged, but my mind couldn't extract any great signal from the cultural noise. For all I know, he wrote each bit on an index card and then shuffled the cards before typesetting the book. The gags are all about the randomness of the wrong information cluttering his minds and, to a large extent, the texture of the words.
Long ago, an editor would have thrown this guy out on his ear for even suggesting that 230 some pages of chuckles would be worthy of getting people together for a book publication party. I don't think the editor or the publisher let those worries get in the way.
Which brings us to the answer I owe you about why this is a post- internet book. As the non-funny "unified theory of the web" in Small Pieces Loosely Joined pointed out, the web is made up by many small pieces of information arranges with hyperlinks that join them, loosely if you will. Well, that's this book. Random pieces of crap, given an additional shuffle to make it seem all the more random. It's all very loosely joined.
Long ago, professional writers like John Hodgman included narrative arcs and well-wrought plotlines with their books. Perhaps we don't need them any more. Maybe the Internet has changed our brain and made us happy to graze from the bar without the need of a sitdown meal. To put on my PROFESSIONAL POSTER hat, I think that the Internet has made us accustomed to getting our stuff in loosely joined pieces.
In fact it's worse than that. Most bloggers write complete paragraphs, but many parts of the book are just a collection of tiny bits that don't even qualify as full paragraphs. Many of the entries are just lists and many of the items in these lists aren't even complete sentences. This modern approach to writing is everywhere. Even the old dead-tree-based print media is producing magazines filled with so-called stories that are nothing more than lists of cool things to do, watch, or eat. The high-toned magazines may even have two or three sentences per list item--enough, I guess, to qualify as a paragraph, but most are nothing more than lists.
Some folks seem to feel that this fragmented, attention-deficit- whatever life is a good thing. Steven Johnson, for instance, argues in his book that the jumpy plots made of many short scenes are evidence of an expanding intellect. Modern TV seems almost unwatchable to me. But I also find old Starsky and Hutch episodes to be terribly plodding. Won't they just get to the point and catch the killers? But, back then, the journey was 9/10ths of the fun. The point wasn't really the point.
But maybe I'm just making too much of it. Plenty of comedy has always been filled with short pieces. Steve Martin's Cruel Shoes , for instance, was broken into a number of very short bits, although there really were a few threads woven throughout the book. Absurdist comedy like Monty Python's Flying Circus was just a collection of wacky riffs, but they did try to come up with clever and even more absurdist segueways to carry the viewer from scene to scene. It was not usual to have a bunch of guys walk into the frame of a sketch and carry one or more of the characters off and into the frame of another set.
At this point, I sort of feel that I need to add what PROFESSIONAL WRITERS call a "kicker", some sort of question or twist that connects us with the top of the piece and gives the reader a sense of closure. They're hard to find and even harder to craft. Ones that are even slightly funny or insightful can get you promoted. But, given the spirit of the book, I feel inclined to invoke the spirit of a hobo, slack a bit, and steal the ending from the book itself. (I can do this without spoiling the book for you!) As Hodgman writes when he comes to the end of the deck of joke cards, "That is all."
You can purchase The Areas of My Expertise from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
FTFR: (Score:4, Funny)
Yep. That'd be slashdot.
Re:FTFR: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:FTFR: (Score:2)
(Score:6, Insghtfully Funny that made me laugh out loud)
(Note: Thats ROFL to you AIM dweebs)
Sounds interesting (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:5, Funny)
I've since moved on to the corner of Ironwood and Edison. Better traffic flow.
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:1)
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:2)
And I don't appreciate this [fiestyturtles.com]!
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:1)
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:2)
Googlefight agrees, Ironwood and Edison has over twice the results.
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:1)
Re:Sounds interesting (Score:2)
> guy on the median at the intersection of Ironwood and Laneview St.'.
If you haven't before, next time you pass one stop and ask his name and have chat. I'll bet you that you'll learn a lot about life outside your cube. Most of these guys have fascinating tales to tell if only you ask. Give it 5 years and it might be you there at the intersection...
~Pev
At first, I thought... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:2)
Grammar nazi, watch out for the spelling nazis. Unless you really meant "at first I though that"?
Hey (Score:2)
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:1)
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:1)
I didn't know you frequented slashdot, Mr. Shatner!
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:1)
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:2)
Re:At first, I thought... (Score:2)
At first, I thought that everyone, gnu how to use proper, punctuation. But, now I see, I, was wrong.
- Richard Stallman.
what kind of word is this? (Score:5, Funny)
and even more absurdist segueways to carry
is that pronounced seg-way-ways? Reminds me of the "ATM Machine" joke...
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
Oh, and "Grunge Song" on the same album (Never an Adult Moment) is pretty great, too.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:4, Funny)
This is Insightful? OK, every time I try to put on my shoes, I forget how to tie them.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
ATM Machine.
PIN number.
oh never mind. :)
sigh (Score:2)
Do we have to explain everything to you? The great-grandparent was obviously meant as a joke, yet it was moderated insightful. Strangely enough, the reply, which was just a quote of the grantparent was modded funny.
Not only are the mods stupid, the comments are too. I mean worse than normal - normally if something is modded up a few times it is somewhat intelligent.
Re:sigh (Score:2)
Insightful gives karma. Funny doesn't. Mods aren't on crack, they're your friends.
Maybe this should be spelled out in the FAQ.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:4, Informative)
Automatic Teller Machine Machine
Personal Identification Number Number.
Wow.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
by MemeRot (80975)
"Whenever I try to use the ATM machine, I always forget my PIN number. "
This is Insightful? OK, every time I try to put on my shoes, I forget how to tie them.
Very appropriate name for the post of this comment.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:1)
No one seems to notice the triple redundancy.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
a) needlessly harm your karma (since you get no bonus for +funny but get a penalty for -redundant)
b) make your post invisible since it is hilarious
c) waste mod points pointing it out, since my mod can't get meta-modded 'funny'.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:3, Funny)
"RTFA the article, moron!"
Surprisingly, it wasn't on
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
Now remember that NT stood for "New Technology".
So Windows 2000 was built on 10-year-old New Technology Technology.
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
Ah, yes. Of course, back in the day when they first built NT, that startup screen said "Built on New NT Technology".
Whereas on XP startup they have to say "Built on Old NT Technology".
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:2)
Spring I noticed all the ATMs at a bank rebooting Win2K. This from a place
whee you are assigned a 4 digit PIN that you cannot change. *shudder*
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:1)
Re:what kind of word is this? (Score:1)
Oh, about 14 pounds.
Ba-dum, bam.
"Won't they just get to the point" (Score:5, Funny)
New English (Score:4, Insightful)
New English Rulez! (for instance).
Re:New English (Score:2)
That would completely defeat the entire purpose of language. Not to mention, it would make self-propagation of the meme rather difficult, if no one can decode the message.
Not to say that some of the deliberately incoherent or semicoherent work of authors such as Stein have no value... But their value lies directly in breaking the verbal mind out of its rut, rather than as a means of communication.
S
Re:New English (Score:1)
Difficulty propagating is the point. If the non-target group doesn't "get it", then the language acts as a kind of encrypted language for the "in crowd" who does understand, or at least think they understand because it's so ambiguous that it means just what they want it to mean. Fox News of course excells at this kind of language, and so does Bush's speech writers. "We do not torture!" A sound
Re:New English (Score:2)
What you say?
Somebody set up us the bomb!
Not to mention, it would make self-propagation of the meme rather difficult, if no one can decode the message.
All your base are belong to us!
HA HA HA HA
Re:New English (Score:1)
Like, "If the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit"?
Re:New English (Score:2)
As far as short units of meaning go, summaries of longer works (epitomes) and collections of epigrams were very popular among the Greeks and Romans, and the potentials of text with absent or obscured
Titles? (Score:3, Funny)
I thought most books had the words "Google", "Apple", or that up-and-comer "Ubuntu".
Oh wait, that's articles. Never mind.
Sounds like the O'Reilly "Hacks" books (Score:1, Offtopic)
The O'Reilly books are incredibly useful, though - at least Linux Server Hacks [amazon.com] certainly was; I just used hack # 99 (the RewriteMap hack [blogs.com]) a week or so ago to do some simple load-balancing. Very handy.
New Form of Book... (Score:5, Interesting)
Vonnegut tried to mimic this style by taking a traditional story arc and shuffling the pieces, but maybe this (or the new types of loosely connected symbols on the web) gets closer to the ideal by removing the story arc entirely.
It certainly seems like you get a sense of character from this book, even without any type of narrative.
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:5, Funny)
Uh...
He didn't really mimic anything, because there's no such place as planet Tralfamadore. He made it all up.
Sorry I had to be the one to tell you.
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:2)
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:1)
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:2)
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:3, Funny)
That's what it looks like to me.
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:1)
I disagree. I'll have you know that I've been there forty years from now.
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:1)
At least somebody caught on to the fact that I was being an ass. Sheesh! How far has Slashdot fallen that my making fun of a parent post which reads like he believes in aliens gets mistaken by some people as typical discussion?
You can mimic something that's fictional, but not if it's your creation, any more than you can cheat on a test by copying answers from your imaginary friend.
What Vonnegut did was pretend to m
Re:New Form of Book... (Score:2)
Toward the end of a collection of his short stories that I own, he takes sever
Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:4, Insightful)
We've had our renaissance and our golden ages of reason and intellectualism and humanistic idealism that gave rise to pro-people icons like the Constitution of the United States.
Now instead we have the encroaching 1984 of Blair, the religious fundamentalism of Bush, and a corporate-driven media culture which farms the brainless masses like cattle and teaches them the new values of disconnected speech. Who needs Voltaire when your mind can find fulfillment in Snoop Dog?
The book of TFA is mainstream in this new world of post-intellectualism. Welcome to the new Dark Age.
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:5, Insightful)
In the 18th and 19th Centuries, the only people who had any time at all for reading was the idle rich. Writers of the time wrote specifically for that audience, meeting the demand for massive, flowery novels and lengthy all-encompassing screeds of political philosophy which the brightest and the best (by which I mean the very rich) could while away their long summer afternoons burying their noses into as they ate their picnic lunches on the riverbanks.
Today, nearly everybody is literate, including those of us who work 40-60 hours each week and don't have nannies, maids, and butlers to take care of our children and homes for us. We are very lucky to have time to keep up with a subscription to the Atlantic Monthly or National Review, let alone read "Anna Karenina" or "The Wealth of Nations."
So "light reading" is very popular right now.
Longer works are probably read at a much higher rate than they used to be. Meaning 1% of the population buys them, and far fewer actually ever finish reading them. At least these days we force our High School kids to get through "Animal Farm", "Huckleberry Finn", and maybe a Shakespear play or two. That's more reading than the average 18th Century factory-town kid ever got exposed to.
A new collection of Dilbert strips to read in the bathroom? Terrific! A new novel by Anne Rice based on the 7-year old Jesus Christ? Dude, I don't have time to read a review of it, let alone the whole book. Maybe I'll put it on my list of Things To Read After I Retire... but there will be a lot of other works way ahead of it on that list.
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps my view of the world was skewed since I came from a family that read a lot, while working 8+ hours a day. And in my busy schedual I still manage to finish a book a week (of nonfiction, generally), not counting all of the other reading I must do in the run of my life, all the articals, forums, books, etc.
But then again I haven't turned on my TV for 3 months, and have started limiting my online times, because they were taking away from intellectual activit
Obl. Onion Link (Score:2)
"But then again I haven't turned on my TV for 3 months, and have started limiting my online times, because they were taking away from intellectual activities." [theonion.com]
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:2)
That's a bunch of hooey. Most people spend hours watching television. We have numerous labor-saving devices which allow us to have free time, like washing machines, dish washers, television, indoor plumbing, et cetera. People could do all their chores back then, and they take a lot less time now... Everything required more maintenance two o
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:2)
If "intellectualism" is to be defined as reading a lot of verbose prose on a regular basis, then yes. I'm too busy to be what you consider an intellectual.
I'd rather pay my mortgage and live the American Dr
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:2, Interesting)
This is no Dark Age. In a lot of ways things are better than they were.
Orwell was bitching about corporations controlling the (print) media long before most Slashdot readers' parents were born. Want to stay in business? You need revenue. Revenue comes from ads. Ads come from corporations and they expect you to dance to the tune they play if you want them to spend their money with you.
Stalin had the 1984 thing working quit
Re:Welcome to the new Dark Age (Score:2, Insightful)
Minds over matters (Score:2)
Gack. I feel overwhelmed sometimes with all the info clouding my single mind, I wonder how he manages with two or more?
Re:Minds over matters (Score:1)
Isn't that a contradiction? (Score:2, Insightful)
If they made you chuckle then they no longer belong in that list, right? Kind of like the set of all sets that do not include themselves...
Re:Isn't that a contradiction? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't that a contradiction? (Score:2)
I was about to say "I don't see why a set of all sets that do not include themselves is difficult", but then I tried to think of a set that DID include itself, which is an impossibility (or requires placeholders and is still infinitely recursive).
(\x x x)(\x x x)
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
they obviously have to be infinite though."
Not at all; Let the set A contain all things which are either the teaspoon sitting on the corner of my desk, or are sets that do not contain anything that is not themselves or the teaspoon sitting on the corner of my desk. A contains itself, but is not infinite.
There are probably less silly examples.
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
That is a bit like the old one about the guy who says he always lies. What is something that is not itself?
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
No. The set I am describing does not contain anything that is not itself or the teaspoon on the corner of my desk. Therefore, the moon is not in the set; you are not in the set; the number 5 is not in the set. There is nothing in the set except itself and the teaspoon.
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
I see. Does that mean the set also does not contain things with a sense of humor?
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
Your post indicated a misunderstanding of the admittedly confusing language of my original post, so I sought to clarify. If you actually understood perfectly, and pretending to misinterpret stupid set-theory examples is just your idea of funny, than I apologize for having implied otherwise, and you need to get out more.
Re:the set of all sets; (Score:2)
I was also intrigued by the notion of a thing that is not itself.
But you are correct, I probably do need to get out more.
8/10 (Score:1)
Re:8/10 (Score:2)
Found in the Slashcode source code: (Score:5, Funny)
Uh ... it's a joke (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Uh ... it's a joke (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Uh ... it's a joke (Score:1)
http://archives.econ.utah.edu/archives/pen-l/2000
Maybe Hodgeman was just really stoned? (Score:4, Funny)
Sounds like a very baked-out idea to me. Plodding failure is a joke in itself.
PS what in the world is 'metaphysical misdirection?' is that like ending up in purgatory? Or getting lost on the way to church?
Reminds me of what Lord Byron wrote in Don Juan:
"Explaining metaphysics to the nation, I wish he would explain his explanation."
Re:Maybe Hodgeman was just really stoned? (Score:2)
Metaphysics [wikipedia.org] = a system explaining how the world is.
Compare with the word Ontic.
Sounds like Brittanica Guy (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe he was the inspiration for this guy.
Re:Sounds like Brittanica Guy (Score:2)
amusing ourselves to death (Score:1)
Re:amusing ourselves to death (Score:1)
The web (Score:1, Troll)
...and ungrammatically, too.
Yep, that's the web, all right.
Re:The web (Score:2)
1st draft (Score:1, Flamebait)
Yes (Score:2)
Does anybody really use (Score:1)
Re:Does anybody really use (Score:2)
Listen to a good excerpt online (Score:3, Informative)
Perfect book for the ADD generation (Score:1)
TZ
My thoughts on this (Score:2)
"Eyeless in Gaza" by Aldous Huxley.
"Trout Fishing in America" by Richard Brautigan.
Schott's Original Miscellany (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:T.R. Roosevelt... (Score:2)
Re:T.R. Roosevelt... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:T.R. Roosevelt... (Score:1)
Re:[pg down] (Score:1)
Re:Link Orgy. (Score:2)
http://www.geocities.com/hobotramp/HoboRollCall.h
a list of hoboes which have "caught the westwards" if you can guess what that means...