Columns by Mike Crowl, from the Dunedin Star Midweeker, Dunedin, New Zealand
The first of two columns on books...
Mike Crowl
Two things make a trip to the University
Bookshop's upstairs permanent sale worthwhile. Firstly, the array of
books that appear to have no market. A book of dedications? A book of bits
left out of other books?
Secondly, the way in which customers can discover minor gems, books in the Trivial Pursuit mode. I came across just such a one in the holidays: volume 2 of Notes and Queries, a collection of questions and answers from the Guardian's column in which "readers seek enlightenment from each other on an astonishingly broad range of subjects." In this book the questions are as intriguing as the answers. And quite contradictory answers arise, as mathematicians and scientists and philosophers each take up their own (unproven) point of view. A newspaper column probably isn't the place to ask, "what is the meaning of life?" This question perhaps deserves some of the answers it got, including the one that says that asking such a question is about as meaningful as asking what is the meaning of lumbago. The question "IS THIS a question?" initiates various obscure answers, including "All these cunning answers are actually irrelevant because Shakespeare told us that `that is the question.'" Or, "This sentence no verb. Who cares. This reader bored. Time to bring subject to a." The answers to such questions as why there are so many Coldharbour lanes, or when was the first semi-detached house built, are rather more straightforward, even though the answers vary enormously. Two answers to one question are in Latin, and three to a question on simplified spelling are in various versions of that spelling, including one that gets increasingly unreadable as the paragraph evolves. Two novels which avoid using the letter "e", (one each in English and French) are discussed, and an unexpected dispute arises over the translation. And there are answers that are just fun: "Is it true that goldfish have a memory span of only five seconds?" - The first answer is utterly complex; the second says, "For a fish with a good memory try a piranha. They have a megabyte." The inventors of items, or their descendents, answer questions - only to be contradicted by someone else's descendent. One poet, (Julius Lipton), after living in obscurity for 55 years, pops up to explain what has happened to him since his one and only book was published. The joy of such a column isn't the fact that you get real answers to real questions - although occasionally you do - but the way in which people's minds take up the challenge of answering an intriguing question in an entertaining way. How to measure the weight of your hand, for example. This may have been a genuine question, but it produces some very suspect answers.
Finally, what do you notice about the following poem: Or the following sentences? "Jump, dogs! Why vex Fritz Blank, Q.C.?" or Mr Jock, TV quiz PhD, bags few lynx." (After all this, here's my question. Has anybody seen volume one of "Notes and Queries?")
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