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Don't Know Much About Geography: Revised and…
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Don't Know Much About Geography: Revised and Updated Edition (Don't Know Much About Series) (edition 2013)

by Kenneth C. Davis

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
1,1171117,971 (3.68)6
Well that start date is kind of untrue. When I got this from the library I realized it was at 20% already and via LT I realized I'd started and abandoned this in 2015. I nearly did the same in 2016.

While either the e-book format and/or his update have addressed the factual errors mentioned in previous reviews, his updating of this book is random. In one breath he's talking about the fall of Yugoslavia as if it was yesterday and the Euro is a thing of the future. In another, he's talking about the fall of Mubarak and Arab Spring. While the book has good framework, it lacks a good organizational structure and/or cohesive narrative.

That said, some fun factoids and myth debunking: seven seas, four oceans, some of the ancient seven wonders and an interesting read. I enjoyed his snippets on the history behind mythical and biblical places and ongoing geographical questions such as whether Cleopatra was white.

"Of course, the ancients were not the only ones with strange ideas about geography" Oh so he met Sarah Palin in the course of his research. ( )
  skinglist | Feb 29, 2016 |
Showing 11 of 11
12/5/22
  laplantelibrary | Dec 5, 2022 |
Good book, similar to "America's Hidden History". The author claims he's going to make Geography less dry for readers, but I don't think he really accomplishes that by discussing such things as ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greek, Persian, etc. societies. Certainly his tidbits are informational if you are already interested in Geography, but not enough to make the layman suddenly become a fan. I also thought his chapter on climate was too preachy. And I don't know if there's an updated edition, but the copy I read was copyrighted in approximately 1993. He mentions several times about how there's going to be an update to his figures in the late 90's, but it's annoying to know that we've passed that milestone and here I'm reading about outdated material. ( )
  Jeff.Rosendahl | Sep 21, 2021 |
Rather tedious at times and much heavier on the history than I expected.
  LaPhenix | Mar 21, 2017 |
Well that start date is kind of untrue. When I got this from the library I realized it was at 20% already and via LT I realized I'd started and abandoned this in 2015. I nearly did the same in 2016.

While either the e-book format and/or his update have addressed the factual errors mentioned in previous reviews, his updating of this book is random. In one breath he's talking about the fall of Yugoslavia as if it was yesterday and the Euro is a thing of the future. In another, he's talking about the fall of Mubarak and Arab Spring. While the book has good framework, it lacks a good organizational structure and/or cohesive narrative.

That said, some fun factoids and myth debunking: seven seas, four oceans, some of the ancient seven wonders and an interesting read. I enjoyed his snippets on the history behind mythical and biblical places and ongoing geographical questions such as whether Cleopatra was white.

"Of course, the ancients were not the only ones with strange ideas about geography" Oh so he met Sarah Palin in the course of his research. ( )
  skinglist | Feb 29, 2016 |
This was just the book I was looking for. Geography is a science not just of place names and boundaries, but of politics and culture and environment and history. I learned tons about exploration and wars and colonization and weather and climate and more, all in bite-sized chunks that somehow managed to be very accessible without talking down to the reader. I never felt embarrassed by my lack of knowledge, and it opened my eyes to a number of subjects I never knew could be interesting. Definitely recommended as a solid introduction. ( )
  melydia | Mar 24, 2014 |
The author has issued a 2013 revised and expanded edition of this 1992 book for several reasons. One is of course that the geographical arrangement of the world has changed quite a bit in that time. A second is the dismal state of knowledge among Americans about geography generally. (For example, a study in 2006 of Americans aged 18 to 24 found that two-thirds cannot find Louisiana on a U.S. map and two in ten cannot even point to the Pacific Ocean on a world map.) Another is that he sees a need to counter what he describes as “a concerted attack on science” in America during the past twenty years. In particular, he wants to address some beliefs widely held but anathema to scientists.

Davis observes that a 2012 Gallup survey found that 46% of Americans believe in the creationist view that God created humans in their present form, and within the last 10,000 years. He also cites the related widespread belief in “intelligent design” - i.e., the notion that the natural world exhibits such heights of beauty and functionalism that it must, ipso facto, demonstrate the hand of God rather than the rational outcome of evolutionary processes. On both of these accounts, Davis takes us through the geological and anthropological data that can be found right beneath our feet. Nevertheless, religious groups have exercised a great deal of financial and political clout to ensure that schools teach alternative theories to creation and evolution.

Third, he seeks to show the evidence demonstrating, in contradistinction to the beliefs of many, the reality of global warning. Each of these three beliefs, he avers, is grounded in theology, not science. Why have they endured in spite of so much irrefutable scientific evidence?

Davis suggests that media pundits as well as think tanks, special interest groups funded by fossil fuel and related industries, and activist conservative groups have engaged in a concerted campaign to raise doubts about the truth of global warming and to influence schools to teach “alternative theories” to evolution. By sharing with us about what a study of geography reveals and by taking us on a tour of the earth past, present, and future, the author hopes to show us - to the contrary - what science actually teaches us about the world.

You may wonder, what does geography have to do with evolution and global warming? Quite a bit, as it happens. In terms of global warming, the “friendliness” of the Earth to living beings is very much influenced by Earth’s surface temperature. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is full of bad news in this regard.

The Union of Concerned Scientists (who are very concerned), points out:

"Climate disruptions put our food and water supply at risk, endanger our health, jeopardize our national security, and threaten other basic human needs. Some impacts—such as record high temperatures, melting glaciers, and severe flooding and droughts—are already becoming increasingly common across the country and around the world.”

There is much more to geography, and much more to this book. The author gives us a history of geographical exploration, and tells us all about oceans and continents and rivers and deserts. Most importantly, he manages to make it all interesting and humorous.

My favorite parts of the book are the Q&A sections interspersed throughout the text, posing questions everyone always wants to know, along with the answers: Was there an Atlantis? Was there a Troy? What’s so bad about the Badlands? Why are there no deserts on the Equator? And what is a desert, anyway? What is the origin of names like Canary Islands, Sandwich Islands, the Black Sea, and the Red Sea? What’s the Mercator projection? Are there really elephants in the Alps? What are the Seven Wonders of the World and where did they go?

Davis makes science more like a game show than hard work, and if you are listening to the audio, 13 hours of fascinating facts.

Evaluation: This book (to which I listened on audio) never lost my interest until the appendices, which contain, for example, lists of weights and measures. These items would be nice to have in a hardbound book, but I’m not sure it was necessary to read them aloud! (Then again, “unabridged” is unabridged!) But otherwise, the audio version is perfect for listening to on car trips, because much of what Davis discusses will be appearing right before your eyes! And there is a lot that is fun and astounding (especially given the apparent low level of knowledge about geography generally), that will provide you and other passengers with lots to talk about! ( )
  nbmars | Sep 18, 2013 |
I'll be honest with you...I haven't finished this one yet. I just kept falling asleep whenever I tucked myself into bed to read! But that's my only complaint about the book: it's not good bedtime reading unless you suffer from insomnia. The content is great and simply, yet engagingly, explained. What's fun about geography is that it's so tied up with history that you can't help but learning more than one subject at once. Davis also throws in the occasional amusing personal anecdote, so that it doesn't feel like your old high-school textbook that, if it tried to engage you, it did so with only-a-geologist-could-have-written-it puns on the Earth's "crust", etc. I just hope I find time to finish this at some point during the day! ( )
  ChiaraBeth | Nov 7, 2009 |
This is such a fun book. It isn't dry as the title might imply, and is, in my view, the best of Kenneth C. Davis's books ( )
  ksmyth | Aug 20, 2006 |
A wonderful and easy to understand overview of geography. ( )
  Babbler | Jun 2, 2006 |
Everything you need to know about the world but never learned.
Who killed the dead sea?...Where was the garden of Eden?...What's so bad about the badlands?

The author of the critically acclaimed national bestseller Don't Know Much About History now takes us on a fascinating, breathtaking and hilarious grand tour of the planet Earth—opening our eyes and imaginations to a wide, wild, and wonderful world we never knew. ( )
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
  Tutter | Mar 10, 2015 |
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