3.5 stars

Sedaris loses one rating star for not enough original material. Half of these essays were published in The New Yorker over the past few years.

Great concept, clunky execution.

For Sedaris enthusiasts only.

Prepper-lite. More interestingly, a very general overview of how the world works, and how the Industrial Revolution and agriculture got us to this point.

Interesting to be reading this book now, as its prequel is being serialised in newspapers across the globe.

Seemed the right time to re-read this book.

Unintentionally, another book about atemporality.

Quantum Leap + The Girl With the Dragon Tatto + (a dash of) Sherlock. Thoroughly enjoyable.

At times utterly charming, at other times tedious and bitter. With my red pen I'd have made this into a lovely book, half as long, with a companion blog. In fact, why isn't this man blogging? He clearly keeps a journal.

Re-read this book after being in the UK for 6+ years. Most of Bryson's observations on British culture are still relevant. I hope he'll write an update next year for the book's 20th birthday.

Though I'm not considering writing about time travel, I find the concept to be an interesting thought experiment. I won't pretend I understood about 25% of this book due to lack of advanced understanding of math and physics. Still, it was enjoyable and imagination-sparking.

On par with his last novel, Solar, this book is reasonably enjoyable but not as much so as some of his previous work.

Funny memoir that reads like a series of articles in The New Yorker. Oh wait, I did read a few of these as articles in The New Yorker! Still enjoyable, and a nice companion to Caitlin Moran's memoir that I just finished.

British newspaper columnist, Caitlin Moran, offers up tips on how to be a strident feminist (which doesn't mean you hate men), in this part-memoir, part humourous rant. Very enjoyable, and recommended to all current and latent feminists (men included).

Not Ronson's best book, but still enjoyable. If you listen to This American Life you'll be familiar with some parts of the book. Also not as much about psychopaths as I expected, given the title. Oh, and now I'm eyeing everyone I know with suspicion.

Reasonably entertaining post-apocalyptic zombie novel set in London. The best part is imagining where I'd hide from the zombies in this big city.