Yesterday, after some back-and-forth with a German customs officer, my husband finally got hold of a parcel that had gone astray. It turned out to contain 5 copies of the audio version of my book “Lost in Math.” UNABRIDGED. Read by Laura Jennings.
7 discs. 8 hours, 43 minutes. Produced by Brilliance Audio.
I don’t need 5 copies of this. Come to think of it, I don’t even have a CD player. So, I decided, I’ll give away two copies. Yes, all for free! I’ll even pay the shipping fee on your behalf.
All you have to do is leave a comment below, and explain why you are interested in the book. The CD-sets will go to the first two such commenters by time stamp of submission. And, to say the obvious, I cannot send a parcel to a pseudonym, so if you are interested, you must be willing to provide a shipping address.
Ready, set, go.
Update: The books are gone!
As a math major who often regretted not studying physics, I am enamored of both the title and the premise of the book. I hope one copy of that CD set can find its way to me. Thanks so much.
ReplyDeleteI would very much like to listen to this, please.
ReplyDeleteI have a passion for maths. I have a wide range of books here, such as "The Math Book" and "Algebra For Dummies". Maths was an underrated subject at school, one which wasn't always popular to admit to liking.
But from algebra to prime numbers, it remains a fascinating and compelling subject, and one that can teach us much about the world.
On a final note, as someone who likes detective fiction, there is no better "detective work" out there than the many maths-related puzzles one can find, some of which remain unsolved.
Stephen Parry
I would like a copy of this book as a former field theorist who left the field for different pastures but kept an interest in it. I studied for my Ph.D. when string theory was becoming the new craze and did not jump on that bandwagon.
ReplyDeletePaul Owen, Stephen Parry: Congrats, you were first!
ReplyDeletePlease send me an email to hossi[at]fias.uni-frankfurt.de with a shipping address and I will send the CDs your way.
Andre: Sorry! You were, like, a second late.
With all their faults, major and minor, I really loved reading Lee Smolin's The Trouble with Physics and Peter Woit's Not Even Wrong. I'd like to place your book (CD!) among these on my shelf.
ReplyDeleteI read your blog, and it is always excellent. It fills my heart with glee when someone stands firm against the tide.
No problem. I'll probably enjoy more the paper/ebook version. I need to clear up a backlog of other books I have to read first before I buy a copy.
ReplyDeleteIm a curious physics student from Germany. I've come across this book before but I dont own a copy. I'd like to have a audio copy so that I can listen to it on the way to the university. I've only read Cpl of pages but listing to it would be an easy way to finish it.
ReplyDeleteHello. I’m not keen on Amazon, and I live in the UK (for however much longer there is a UK). But Amazon seems to be the only way of getting an English-language written version here, whether ebook or printed. Any ideas?
ReplyDeleteHi Ecrasez,
ReplyDeleteYes, that's because I don't have a publisher in the UK and I have pretty much given up hope I'll ever have one. I have been told, however, that some bookstores in the UK sell the book. Also, if you order it in the US, you certainly don't have to order it on amazon. You can, eg, also order it at Barnes and Noble.
"I’m not keen on Amazon, and I live in the UK (for however much longer there is a UK). But Amazon seems to be the only way of getting an English-language written version here, whether ebook or printed. Any ideas?"
ReplyDeleteWhile I am a fan of eBooks, I am not a fan of the Kindle, and not a fan of Amazon, and apparently this isn't available in ePub format, so I bought the paper book. I ordered it from a bookshop in Germany. It was shipped, probably from the USA. Perhaps you could do the same thing in England.
bee:
ReplyDeletejust a note to your readers about ordering from Amazon. i purchase nearly every new pop science book as soon as possible (i have a lot of time available for reading - about 5-6 books per week) and many scientific textbooks as well and many of them can be purchased on Amazon UK long before they become available on Amazon US (i have no idea why). For example,
"Professor Maxwell’s Duplicitous Demon: The Life and Science of James Clerk Maxwell "
will be available on Amazon UK on Feb. 7 but not on Amazon US until May 14.
The cost of having the book shipped to the US from the UK is not prohibitive (for me) and i usually get delivery within 7-10 days.
and if you want to know what books are coming out in the future, you can periodically check
https://www.amazon.com/gp/new-releases/books/ref=sv_b_1
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/new-releases/books/ref=zg_bsnr_unv_b_1_73_1
Finally, if you want to locate a scientific book, especially one out-of-print, the BookFinder website can help:
https://www.bookfinder.com/search/?keywords=george+h.+weiss¤cy=USD&lang=en&st=sh&ac=qr&submit=
naive theorist
I read the book - it was great
ReplyDeleteThanks Sabine and Phillip. I’ll get it that way.
ReplyDeleteHello, Sabine. I would love to listen to the book. I do not know the language of math, though. I used to be a French-Romanian teacher back in Romania, and I live now in the States, working as a nurse. I would be very interested into the scientific paradigm, if u have such a thing, in your book. I am trying to apply it to my own research on sound. Thank you for your generosity!
ReplyDeleteNOT FAIR!
ReplyDeleteI needed the audiobook for medical reasons! (blind as a bat; I actually just set up an eyeglass rack today by my computer desk for the four different strengths I normally need while at the desk! : )
That's OK... I'll just keep reading the hardcover until it feels like my eyes are on fire. And I am absolutely tired... tired... of running into passages that convey precisely things I have thought or written previously, perhaps months, years, or even decades ago.
The weirdest ones are the ones where I post one or more of those thoughts in a comment on BackReAction, then read the passage in Lost In Math the next night!
Happened again last night... more than once!
As for the audiobook, yes, it would be nice to have in addition to the print version, but could never take its place in my case. If I come to a concept that is difficult to grasp, I'll re-read it until I can. And, like some of my textbooks, there are some things in the book that I'll just have to move on from when it seems it's not going to happen any time soon... or ever (TCP/IP had some doozies). It seems such concepts might be more difficult to grasp when listening to an audio version.
Coincidentally (no, really!) I ran across this article yesterday. Never heard of this "Feynman" guy but, apparently, he had some ideas about learning techniques:
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-feynman-technique-the-best-way-to-learn-anything
Since you said you don't have a CD player, I'll tell you that you don't need one. You can convert the CD's to MP3 files on your computer. If you have an application such as iTunes it's easy to do.
ReplyDeleteI don't have a CD player either, so when I get a CD audio book from the library I convert it to MP3 and listen on my player. CD's are on their way out, and more and more audio books are available for download from libraries, so I seldom have to convert anymore.
Steven,
ReplyDeleteI don't have a CD/DVD drive on my laptop either in case that's what you mean (it's one of these flat and lean things). Yes, I do have an external USB drive somewhere, and yes, I do sometimes use this to import CDs and put the MP3s on my phone, but I can't do that with the audiobook because the harddrive on my phone is full (not sure with what tbh). And in any case, my desire to listen to a woman reading my own book back to me is limited. Thanks for the advice anyway :) Best,
B.
bee:
ReplyDeletei just figured out why you may not be able to find a British publisher. Perhaps, they don't recognize your book title which they would write as "Lost in Maths". when i wrote my 2nd book i had such as issue about its title "Modeling Nature" vs "Modelling Nature".
as Churchill said " England and America are two nations separated by a common language".
LOL
naive theorist.
What would have been cool is if you had published the book in the same "form factor," as Gerrit Noordzij's Letterletter was:
ReplyDeletehttps://books.google.com/books/about/Letterletter.html?id=L6AQAQAAMAAJ&source=kp_book_description
@Sabine wrote: My desire . . . is limited
ReplyDeleteIf I wrote a book I think I'd want to hear someone read it. But that could backfire if I don't like the way it's done. :-)
"If you've used Google+ for comments on your own or other sites, this feature will be removed from Blogger by February 4th and other sites by March 7th. All your Google+ comments on all sites will be deleted starting April 2, 2019."
ReplyDeleteSee! It is possible to be both smart and "uneducated"! : )
R. Taylor,
ReplyDeleteNot sure what you are quoting there. I am not using Google+ comments on this site. I tried this once, but turning on the feature would hide all already existing comments. So how do you switch without offending some hundreds of people who are trying to have a discussion or follow one?
Blogger has had issues with their comment feature for many years. It works badly, to say the least. Anonymous comments, though strictly speaking turned off, have in practice returned with the many "Unknowns". And currently the only way to get rid of those is to turn off comments entirely. The spam filter is miserable. About half of the comments I currently get are junk.
I believe that some time last year they have been working on an update. Suspecting so because I noticed some submitted comments were actually marked as responses to some other comment, though that's a feature which doesn't exist. Did anyone else notice that?
Another option would be to use a 3rd party plugin. I have been thinking about this for some while. But I myself use an ad blocker that prevents those from loading and it seems a disadvantage.
@ Dr. Bee:
ReplyDeleteI've not noticed any comments being automatically designated or nested as "replies", but I'll look more closely going forward. (Aha! This would require a "Reply" button, would it not? Which I've not seen, either... only the shit-can button : )
As for the Google+ info, it came to me in an e-mail, and is linked below:
https://support.google.com/plus/answer/9217723#blogger
The link goes directly to the section quoted, but further info is available on the page.
I thought it might affect this blog because, while my and some others' comments carry a "Blogger" badge beside the poster's name, some (including yours) carry a "G+" badge. It appears I'm signed in here with a regular "Google" account, though I did set up a G+ account at some point in the distant past only because I was forced to; always tried to avoid using it.
Let me go before I get started on why I never did and never would touch Facebook with a ten-foot pole : )
R Taylor,
ReplyDeleteYes, my blogger account is linked to my G+ account. I also got a notification saying that the G+ account will be deleted soon. I am not really surprised. But I don't think this will affect the comments shown here. (Or at least I hope so.)
Say about facebook what you wish, but anonymous insults are pretty much a non-problem there.