How to win friends and influence fungi Collected quirks of science, tech, engineering, and math from Nerd Nite

Book - 2024

"In the vein of acclaimed popular-science bestsellers such as Atlas Obscura, Astrophysics for Young People in a Hurry, The Way Things Work, What If?, and Undeniable, the co-founders of the global science organization Nerd Nite bring readers a collection of wacky, yet fascinating STEM topics. For 20 years, Nerd Nite has delivered to live audiences around the world, the most interesting, fun, and informative presentations about science, history, the arts, pop culture, you name it. There hasn't been a rabbit hole that their army of presenters hasn't been afraid to explore. Finally, after countless requests to bring Nerd Nite to more fans across the globe, co-founders and college pals Matt Wasowski and Chris Balakrishnan are brin...ging readers the quirky and accessible science content that they crave in book form, focused on STEM and paired with detailed illustrations that make the content pop. The resulting range of topics is quirky and vast, from kinky, spring-loaded spiders to the Webb telescope's influence on movie special effects. Hilariously named after Dale Carnegie's iconic book, How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi features narratives, bursts, and infographics on all things STEM from scientists around the world. Chapters are sure to make you laugh-out-loud, with titles such as "The Science of the Hangover," "What Birds Can Teach Us About the Impending Zombie Apocalypse," and "Lessons from the Oregon Trail." With fascinating details, facts, and illustrations, combined with Chris and Matt's incredible connections to organizations such as the Discovery Network and the Smithsonian Institution, How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi is sure to reach joyful STEM enthusiasts of all ages around the world. About Nerd Nite: Started in 2003, Nerd Nite is a monthly event held in 100+ cities worldwide during which folks give 20-minute fun-yet-informative presentations across all disciplines, while the audience drinks along!"--

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502.07/Balakrishnan
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 502.07/Balakrishnan (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 1, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Humor
Trivia and miscellanea
Published
New York, NY : St. Martin's Press, an imprint of St. Martin's Publishing Group 2024.
Language
English
Other Authors
Kristen Orr (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xv, 304 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781250288349
  • Introduction
  • Creature Features
  • Camel Spiders: The Rumors of My Size Have Been Greatly Exaggerated
  • Military Marine Mammals: Dolphins So Smart They Should Give Their Own Nerd Nite Presentation
  • Sex Catapults!
  • Cephalopods: The Impossibly Awesome Invertebrates
  • Stomatopods: Why Is My Thumb Bleeding and My Mind Blown?
  • Finding Nemo('s Sex): Sex Change and Gender Roles in Anemonefishes
  • Mmm … Brains
  • It's Not You, It's Misophonia
  • Sex, Drugs, and Happiness
  • Don't Trust Your Brain: Why Foreign Accents Are All in Your Head
  • Lessons from The Oregon Trail
  • Synesthesia: Hearing Colors and Tasting Sounds
  • Brain on a Chip: The Ethics of Brain Experimentation
  • How We Become Disgusting (Some More Than Others)
  • Bodily Fluids
  • To Boldly Go: Dealing with Poop and Pee in Space
  • Milk! You'll See It Everywhere Once You Know What to Look For
  • Triclosan: It's Not the Bacteria but the Soap That's Going to Kill You!
  • Lost: Bladder Control. Reward for Safe Return.
  • Microbes Can Save You, Kill You, or Just Give You the Poops
  • Runoff: What Is It and Why Even Notice It?
  • Doing It
  • Hot or Not? How to Be a Perfect 10; or, How to Manipulate Perceptions of Physical Attractiveness
  • Dating Tips from the Animal Kingdom: What to Wear and How to Flaunt It
  • Dating as a Data Nerd
  • 10 Things You Didn't Know About Sex … Education
  • Going Ape for Pansexual Primates
  • Smells and the Microbiome: Are Microbes Controlling Your Sex Life?
  • Health and (Un)Wellness
  • Maggot Therapy; or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bugs
  • Happy 13th Birthday, Nerd Nite! Now Get Yourself to an Adolescent Medicine Doctor
  • What Your DNA Says About You
  • The Science of the Hangover
  • You and Your Microbiome: Say Hello to Your Little Friends
  • Penis or Vagina? 'Tain't That Simple!
  • The Modern Study of Genetics Is Full of Twists and Turns
  • Pathogens and Parasites
  • Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Birds
  • Pigeons, Cannibals, and Vaginas: The Story of My Favorite Parasite
  • What Birds Can Teach Us About the Impending Zombie Apocalypse
  • Zombies Are Real and You Might Be One
  • Hacking the Antiviral Immune Response
  • Human Parasites (No, Not Your Mooching Roommate)
  • Death and Taxes (But Really, Just Death)
  • Monarch the Bear: A Tale of Tycoons, Taxidermy, and the California Flag
  • How to Not Destroy Ourselves: Lessons from Sci-Fi
  • Mass Extinction
  • How and Why Cancer Happens; or, If You Live Long Enough You're Going to Die
  • Algae Apocalypse: The Most Important Slime
  • Space, the Big and the Beautiful
  • Bullshit in Space: An Astronomical Adventure Through Cosmic Misinformation
  • Preparation A: Our Relief Against Severe ASSteroids
  • Life Under the Ice of Europa
  • Artificial Gravity in Science Fiction
  • Sky Rockets in Flight, Asteroids Delight: Asteroid Mining for Science, Profit, and Fun!
  • Better than NASA: Canada's Sample of an Asteroid; or, the Untold Story of the Tagish Lake Meteorite
  • The Telescope That Blew Everyone's Mind … Part Two!
  • Tech (High and Low)
  • "They're Putting Acid in Our Food!": The Everyman's Guide to Thwarting Fear and Understanding GMOs
  • What I Learned About Dating Apps (Generally) After I Spent Five F**king Years Studying Them for a PhD
  • Adventures in Human-Powered Flight
  • What Does Google See?
  • Becoming a Cyborg Through Disability: Building Prosthetic Limbs
  • Machine Learning for a Free and Open Internet
  • How to Win Friends and Influence Bacteria
  • Why Nuclear Fusion Would Be Awesome-If We Get It to Work
  • Math Is Fun
  • A Tea Test Tempest
  • The Mathematics of Gossip
  • From Bach to Tool: The Secret Math Behind Music Theory
  • Getting to Know Infinity
  • Math for a Better City
  • A Little "Bit" of Cryptography
  • Careers
  • Veterinary Confidential
  • Chindogu: The Japanese Art of Unuseless Inventions
  • Caskets, Corpses, and Biers, Oh My!: A Brief Look at Death Care and the History and Science of Embalming in the US
  • Wildlife Detectives: The Science and Stories of "Animal CSI" in investigating and Solving Wildfife Crime
  • Cut It Off!: A Civil War Amputation
  • Fermentation: A Cultural Story
  • Fire: Of Flames and Friendship
  • Our Beloved Nerd Nite Bosses
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi is a selection of various Nerd Nite presentations collected in written form. As one would expect from Nerd Nite, these presentations range across a remarkable array of subjects, and they vary in length (although none is more than a handful of pages). The 71 essays collected here are loosely arranged into 11 topics (animals, space, math, bodily fluids, etc.) and span the gamut from stories of animal procreation to how cups of tea led to better scientific, experimental protocols to the multiple definitions of infinity. The appeal of Nerd Nites--people presenting information on subjects they're passionate about--translates well into book form. It's quirky, fun, engrossing, and informative. It's a delightful collection! Perfect for existing fans of Nerd Nite, it also serves as an ideal introduction for anyone who may not have heard of these gatherings before. It should appeal to nerds and information lovers of all ilk, despite some salty language and subject matter.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this rollicking collection, Balakrishnan and Wasowski--founders of the Nerd Nite series, in which experts present short, accessible science talks--bring together brief essays by scholars and others on such topics as "sex change and gender roles in anemonefishes," microbes' role in creating human body odor, and the feasibility of sci-fi artificial gravity systems. Numerous entries focus on animals, including scientist Laura Chaibongsai's study of the U.S. Navy's successful efforts to train "dolphins to detect underwater mines" and primatologist Natalia Reagan's survey of homosexual behavior among nonhuman primates. The selections are uniformly irreverent--in "To Boldly Go," journalist Brendan Byrne discusses how astronauts pee and poop during space missions--while dispensing illuminating trivia, as when neuroscientist Paula Croxson explains that the hair-of-the-dog approach to treating hangovers actually does work because the methanol that builds up in the body during an alcohol binge can be partially neutralized afterward with ethanol from alcoholic drinks. The broad range of topics ensures most readers will find something of interest, and the brisk pace will keep them glued to their seats. Playful yet enlightening, this entertains. Illus. Agent: Danielle Svetcov, Levine Greenberg Rostan. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In 2003, Balakrishan, then a Boston University graduate student and now the program director for the National Science Foundation, hosted the first Nerd Nite gathering at a Boston bar. The event combined several 20-minute presentations on any scientific topic with the opportunity for the audience to drink while they took in new facts. It was immediately popular and quickly moved on to New York City, where Wasowski took on the task of spreading these events worldwide. Today, Nerd Nite takes place monthly in more than 100 cities across the globe, and many presentations are featured on the brand's YouTube channel. Presenters are often grad students or professors just getting started in their fields. The Nerd Nite cofounders determined that the next logical step in their offerings would be a collection of articles by some of their most popular presenters. Topics range from wildlife and bodily fluids to space and mathematics. This book features 70 such articles, each designed to inform and delight readers with irreverent tones and factual accounts of particular subjects. VERDICT Delightful and eminently readable. This book about the Nerd Nite empire will be an excellent addition to science collections.--Jennifer Moore

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A quirky compilation presents an engaging stroll through a forest of peculiar subjects. For anyone who often finds life difficult, depressing, and too serious, this book is for you. Balakrishnan and Wasowski collect dozens of presentations from their Nerd Nite events, which are held monthly. There is also a YouTube channel, curated by the authors, who between them have a good mix of expertise. The subjects are largely scientific and cover topics ranging from the chemical basis of hangovers to the complex math of gossip. Some of the presenters are established scientists, while others are doctoral students or people who just know a lot about a specific topic. Several of the essays are laugh-out-loud funny--e.g., Jane Gregory's piece about why some people are driven to paroxysms by small but repetitive sounds, such as those made by the annoying individuals who eat chips straight from the foil bag ("misophonia can attach itself to any repetitive sound, but the most common ones are things like chewing, breathing, sniffing, and throat clearing)." Others, such as the zombie creatures of the animal kingdom or dealing with excrement in space, are cleverly droll. Many, such as the piece titled "Why Nuclear Fusion Would Be Awesome--If We Get It to Work" or the one explaining how to manipulate perceptions of physical attractiveness ("Hot or Not? How To Be a Perfect 10"), are surprisingly informative. Most of the essays are only a few pages, so the book is a good one to dip into when a lift in mood is required, and Orr's wacky illustrations provide a further dimension. One regrettable omission is that there is no contribution on influencing fungi, although it is clear that Balakrishnan and Wasowski are fun guys. An enjoyable romp through the back alleys of scientific research, proving that knowledge and fun can easily go together. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.