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The Knowledge by Lewis Dartnell
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The Knowledge

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The Knowledge by Lewis Dartnell
Paperback $19.00
Mar 10, 2015 | ISBN 9780143127048

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  • $19.00

    Mar 10, 2015 | ISBN 9780143127048

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  • Apr 17, 2014 | ISBN 9780698151659

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Praise

Wall Street Journal:
“‘The Knowledge” is a fascinating look at the basic principles of the most important technologies undergirding modern society… a fun read full of optimism about human ingenuity.”

Boston Globe:
“[Dartnell’s] plans may anticipate the destruction of our world, but embedded in them is the hope that there might be a better way to live in the pre-apocalyptic world we inhabit right now.”

New York Post:
“A stimulating read, a grand thought experiment on re-engineering the food, housing, clothing, heat, clean water and every other building block of civilization.”

Booklist:
“Dartnell’s vision is a great start in understanding what it took to build our world.”

The Times:
“This book is an extraordinary achievement. With lucidity and brevity, Dartnell explains the rudiments of a civilisation. It is a great read even if civilisation does not collapse. If it does, it will be the sacred text of the new world — Dartnell that world’s first great prophet.”

The Independent:
“The Knowledge is premised on an ingenious sleight of hand. Ostensibly a manual on rebuilding our technological life-support system after a global catastrophe, it is actually a glorious compendium of the knowledge we have lost in the living; the origins of the material fabric of our actual, unapocalyptic lives….The most inspiring book I’ve read in a long time.”

The Guardian:
“The Knowledge is a terrifically engrossing history of science and technology…. [A] cunningly packaged yet entertainingly serious essay in the history of practical ideas.”

Times Higher Education:
“A whirlwind tour of the history of human endeavour in terms of scientific and technological discovery…. Readers will certainly come away better informed, more knowledgeable about, and hopefully more interested in the fundamental science and technology necessary to rebuild a civilised society.”

The Daily Mail:
“Dartnell’s guide to surviving the apocalypse is as breezy and engaging as it is informative. I now know exactly what I’m going to do as soon as a mushroom cloud appears on the horizon. Leap in my golf cart and go straight round to Dartnell’s place.”

The Observer:
“A crash course in the scientific fundamentals underpinning modern-day living. The Knowledge impresses as a condensed history of scientific progress, and will pique curiosity among readers who regret daydreaming throughout school chemistry lessons.”

New Statesman:
“A crash course in the scientific fundamentals underpinning modern-day living. The Knowledge impresses as a condensed history of scientific progress, and will pique curiosity among readers who regret daydreaming throughout school chemistry lessons.”

Nature:
“The ultimate do-it-yourself guide to ‘rebooting’ human civilization. With scientific nous, Dartnell depicts probable environmental scenarios on a stricken Earth and offers putative survivors instruction in the technologies needed to craft a culture from the ground up. Many will thrill to this reminder of our species’ prodigious resilience.”

Seth Mnookin, New York Times bestselling author of The Panic Virus and associate director of MIT’s Graduate Program in Science Writing:
“A marvelously astounding work: In one graceful swoop, Lewis Dartnell takes our multi-layered, interconnected modern world, shows how fragile its scaffolding is, and then lays out a how-to guide for starting over from scratch. Imagine Zombieland told by Neil deGrasse Tyson and you’ll get some sense of what a delight The Knowledge is to read.”

Ken MacLeod, author of Intrusion and Descent:
“Dartnell makes the technology and science of everyday life in our civilization fascinating and understandable. This book may or may not save your life but it’ll certainly make it more interesting. This is the book we all wish we’d been given at school: the knowledge that makes everything else make sense.”

Roger Highfield, journalist, author, and Science Museum executive:
“For all those terrified by runaway climate change, super-eruptions, planet-killer asteroids, doomsday viruses, nuclear terrorism and absolute domination by super-intelligent machines, Lewis Dartnell has written a long-overdue guide to what you should do after the apocalypse: an illuminating and entertaining vision of how to reboot life, civilization and everything. Dartnell’s vision of the survival of the smartest in a post-apocalyptic world offers a remarkable and panoramic view of how civilization actually works.”

S. M. Stirling, New York Times bestselling author of The Given Sacrifice:
“This book is useful if civilization collapses, and entertaining if it doesn’t. After the cometary impact it may save your life, and if it doesn’t at least you’ll know why you perished.”

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