Product Details
The QI Annual 2008

The QI Annual 2008
From Faber and Faber

List Price: £12.99
Price: £7.69 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

53 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

Imagine an edition of "The Guinness Book of Records" selected by a panel of stand-up comedians..."The QI Annual 2008" is packed with original contributions from Stephen Fry, Alan Davies, Jo Brand, Bill Bailey and other regular guests on the show, with games to play at home, puzzles, cartoon strips, mini-encyclopaedias, how-to diagrams and masses of QI facts. If you want to read Julian Clary's poetry about the Queen, Roger Law's musings on flatulent kangaroos, or have often wondered how you might make a waterproof apron out of a whale's foreskin, your Christmas gift dilemma has just been solved. Warning: very silly indeed. Will offend dullards, whales and parents in no particular order.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #22530 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-11-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 96 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
John Lloyd and John Mitchinson are the authors of the bestselling The Book of General Ignorance. John Lloyd was the co-author, with Douglas Adams, of the bestselling The Meaning of Liff, as well as producing Not the Nine O'Clock News, Blackadder and Spitting Image.


Customer Reviews

A joy to behold, with interestingness untold.5
The QI Annual is an endeavor several years in coming, and thank the stars, it more than makes up for the wait. Its theme is all things beginning with "E", and unlike The Book of General Ignorance, the source of its content has little to do with what has already been featured on the show. It focuses, instead, on original tidbits of knowledge offered up by a refreshing variety of authors.

As its colourful cover would suggest, many of QI's regular panellists contribute items to the Annual, their topics ranging from the scholarly to the silly. Dara Ó Briain's narrative about how some of Eire's less celebrated historical figures have actually helped out the world of medicine is hilariously riveting, and Bill Bailey does his part in being entertainingly knowledgeable by offering up brief biographies of "Embarrassingly Named Composers". Even Clive Anderson's treatise on the English Elm is a pleasure to read, for it is suffused with his characteristic wit.

On the other side of the bridge of erudition, we get treats like Jo Brand's imaginary gig as an Agony Aunt ("Dear Aunty Jo, I am on a television show called QI and I keep coming last. What shall I do? Love, Alan"), the pictorial demonstration of emotions by Jimmy Carr and Rowan Atkinson, and Jeremy Clarkson's guide to eating exotic creatures (self-researched, of course). Alan Davies' piece is an essay on--what else?--Essex, and illustrated with a near-nude picture of Jodie Marsh, but it is surprisingly full of interesting information about the area, much of it garnered from personal experience.

Of the segments in the Annual related, if sometimes peripherally, to the show, there is a page on "the poetry of QI", which has rendered extracts from the programme into free verse poems. The highlight here is Julian Clary's much-acclaimed "I Had Wind When I Met the Queen", but I'm a personal fan of "David Beckham Lives in Chingford". On another set of facing pages, the QI Elves guide you through a series of wacky experiments you can actually do, such as measuring the speed of light using grated cheese and a microwave. The accompanying pictures of them in lab-wear makes it clear that, yes, they've done it themselves.

The book provides well for those wanting quick distraction and those willing to delve right into the pile of wisdom. As you might expect from an annual publication, it presents a selection of games and puzzles with which to divert one's attention, including a fiendishly hard quiz that can be entered online. The QI philosophy of offering real knowledge in an absorbing way is not ignored, however, and the annual duly contains fact-filled essays on the eighteenth century and excommunication, tucked in among pieces about lavatories and erotica. Overall highlights include the multi-paneled pastiche entitled "The Education of Stephen" (which has to be seen to be believed), and a disturbingly graphic representation of "The Atrocities of Francois L'Ollonais".

Needless to say, if you were looking for a Christmas gift that'll be a surefire winner, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend the QI Annual. With any luck, we won't have to wait five more years for the next one.

Humour me5
This is the one book you'll want to buy either for yourself, as a Christmas gift, or just generally as a gift. The reason? It's funny as can be. Not a longish book, its pages rank as some of the funniest and most educational. From Jeremy Clarkson's eating habits to the Elm tree, to Elvis and "I had wind when I met the Queen," you'll be rolling with this book. But lest you think this is all a joke, it is not. There's a real education to be found here, and as they say, "A spoon full of sugar." Colourful and inventive, insightful and brash, THE QI ANNUAL will give you and others hours of entertainment and knowledge. Humour of any kind is my cup-o-tea. Anything from "Do Ants have Arseholes" to the funny and knowing "Katzenjammer" by McCrae.

The QI Annual - an Extremely Entertaining Edition of all things E.5
The team that bought you "The Book of General Ignorance" and the newly released "Book of Animal Ignorance" now edge their way into the world of annuals with this gem of a book worthy of 5 stars and more. This is a first try at an annual by the QI team and it draws upon the styles and familiar joys of past annuals that I used to have when I was a child. It is sure to keep you entertained.

The book has a wonderfully fresh taste to it and the layout presents the perfect balance of knowledge, humour, sausages and stick drawings that anyone can appreciate.

So, if you would like to know more about Vic Reeves' extensive knowledge of pirates or if you would care to casually flip through a brief history of Erotica then this annual will serve you well.

Well done to the team at QI!