Pink Dog

Wanted: a different sort of book review

A mere seven years after it came out, I’ve just finished reading (or more accurately, listening to) Ben Goldacre’s Bad Science. In case you think I am a remarkably slow reader, I should add I also only started it seven years after it came out. Yet in that intervening time, I would always have named it if asked by someone ‘what’s a good book to read about science?’ So why my sloth?

Why I love books

The battered book. The water damaged spine. The coffee marks on the cover. The blood stain on the inside. The folding and refolding of edges on certain pages. The notes scribbled in margins. The smudge of lipstick on the edge... more

Bad Science’s very success paradoxically both made it more and less relevant to read. The more successful a non-fiction book is, the more is said and written about it – and so the more superfluous actually reading it can seem. Once you have consumed enough about a book, it can feel that the time to actually read it will return very little. That is why, sorry Nate Silver, The Signal and the Noise still remains unread by me. With Silver’s high media profile and regular blogging, it feels like his book will not add that much to what I have already consumed.

Yet such judgements can be wrong. In the case of Bad Science, much of it was very familiar territory, duplicating what I had already read and heard from Ben Goldacre through other mediums previously. Yet I do not regret the time I spent on it because – in addition to the quite wonderful narration of the audio book (take a bow, Rupert Farley) – there are some gems of practical detail about how to understand science stories in the media which has passed me by despite my, what I thought was, quite voracious consumption of other Ben Goldacre writings.

Add this to the impact of the digital age and I find myself increasingly wanting a different sort of book review.

The review was written fresh on publication, appearing briefly in print before it hits the fish and chip paper afterlife, still has its value.

But with reviews lingering around online well beyond the initial publication date, with authors pumping out words in so many different channels that their books can feel more familiar now to non-readers, and with older books so easily available to buy online, there is a role for a different type of review. The one written a few years on from publication, based on the premise ‘you’ve heard a lot about this book – but is it still worth reading?’

Reviewers, please ready your keyboards and reach for the further corners of your bookcases for those books you thought worth keeping. Thank you.

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