I’m really happy to be hosting a leg of the blog tour for Marcus Chown’s new book, What a Wonderful World. I’ve got a Q&A AND a giveaway, so read on to find out more.
Me: Hi Marcus. Where do you start writing a book like this (I’m guessing there had to be a plan)?
Hi, Jax.
Well, you’d think there should be a plan, wouldn’t you? Even I thought there should be a plan. But, actually, there wasn’t – or not much of one. The book came about because my editor, Neil Belton, said: “Why don’t you use your skill at explaining physics to anyone, to explain everything to everyone – how the world works.” I was daunted. How would anyone write about everything? Over the space of a year or so, when I tried to put Neil off, I wrote several outlines and ripped them all up.
In the meantime, I did an App called Solar System for iPad. I had to write about 120 stories about different moons and asteroids and planets in only 9 weeks. So I had no choice but simply to do it and, while I was writing, think about what I should be writing next. It must have worked because the App won several awards (though I can’t take all the credit since it was a team effort! Thanks to Faber & Faber, Planetary Visions and Touchpress).
So that’s what I decided to do with this book: jump in and hope everything would come out in the end. The only plan I had was to first of all do the hard stuff I knew nothing about – money, sex,respiration, the brain, and so on. If I could do that, I thought, the book might begin to take shape, and I’d have the stuff I’m more familiar with to finish with. Miraculously, the book did begin to take shape.
Jax: If there was one topic in the book that you had to specialise in, what would it be?
Marcus: I became fascinated by the history of civilisation and what drove agriculture, the ascent of cities, and so on. With numerous interglacials like the current one over the past million years of ice age, why did things begin to take off for us 13,000 years ago and not in the previous warm period between 130,000 and 115,000 years ago? Nobody knows.
I had never realised that the design of stone hand axes did not change for 1.4 million years. Palaeoanthropologists call it the “1.4 million years of boredom”. We are used to this year’s iPhone being different from even the one from two years ago but, for 60,000 generations, nobody improved the design of stone hand axes. This brings home how amazingly different the past 13,000 years have been from the past millions of years of human evolution.
Jax: This book covers an awful lot of knowledge, presumably some was acquired through formal education. What were you like at school – teacher’s pet or rebel without a cause?
Marcus: I am a journalist so a lot of what is in my book I acquired by simply phoning experts – economists, biologists, historians – and picking their brains! But, yes, some of the stuff I did acquire at university.
But I am always wrestling with the things I learnt, trying to really get my head around them. And to me, as a visual person, that means creating pictures in my head to substitute for the mathematics I learnt at university. I find I really understand something only if I can explain it to someone sitting next to me on a number 25 bus (or perhaps I should say someone unfortunate enough to be sitting next to me on a number 25 bus!). It’s my good fortune that the way I understand things overlaps with communicating those things to other people.
But, as for what, I was like at school, I wasn’t a teacher’s pet and I was about the least rebellious person you could imagine. Quiet and rule-abiding and boring, I would say. I used to spend ages doing things like drawing the planets to scale. I was that dull. Hopefully, I’ve improved since then!
Jax: Hm, that doesn’t seem that dull to me 😉 If you had one piece of advice for a ten year old in today’s world, what would it be?
Do the thing you like doing in life because you’ll be better at it than anything else. When I was at school I was told do something that leads to a specific job. The trouble is I liked astronomy. But my dad said: do the thing you like. So I did. And he was right. I have made a living as a science writer, which was not on my careers’ teacher’s menu.
Also, it’s more important to be a good person than a clever person.
But that’s two things!
I really enjoyed your questions. Thanks for hosting a leg of my blog tour. Best wishes, Marcus
Well, I thought that was rather good. The book is excellent too – but not something I’ve managed to devour at a single sitting 😉 I have dipped in and out, having my appetite whetted tonight, for example, by the section on capitalism. There’s a massive bibliography that I think if going to provide lots of extra reading for me, and I very much enjoy interacting with Marcus on twitter. This is a book that I am looking forward to introducing it to the children, I think it will be massively educational for them. And fun too.
Book Giveaway!
Even better than just getting to read the questions I asked, you can get your hands on the book itself. I’ve three copies to giveaway, and as always, it’s an easy comment entry. Just tell me what makes the world wonderful to you.
UK only, get your entries in by Sat 12th October, and I’ll be passing winner’s details to the publisher for fulfilment, so if you don’t want your details passed on, don’t enter. As always, you can get extra entries by tweeting, sharing or by liking my facebook page or subscribing to my email (over there at the right) but you *must* leave an extra comment per method of entry for it to count, I use a plugin (And the winner is) that runs off comments.
There are lots of other stops on the blog tour, and you can find them all here.
3rd October Eliza Do Lots
4th October Buried Under Books
5th October Recovering Agnostic
6th October Live Otherwise
7th October Atifa’s Book Shelf
8th October Curiosity Killed the Bookworm
9th October Keeper of the Snails
10th October Sue Guiney’s Writing Life
11th October The Book of Lost Nights
12th October Annabel’s House of Books
13th October Keris Stainton
14th October Teen Librarian
15th October Penguin Galaxy
16th October Open Democracy
Do enjoy!





Comments
49 responses to “What a wonderful World – Marcus Chown blog tour Q&A and giveaway.”
what makes the world wonderful? hmm knowing that I won’t be here for long & there’s still so much I haven’t seen !
only one thing that makes my world wonderful is hard! people – love and hugs from family and friends, kindnesses unanticipated, and places – sitting in my conservatory, walking on the beach or people watching from a cafe in a plaza. i guess the theme is being connected to my world makes the world wonderful to me
I think the wonderful thing about the world is that the more you learn about it, the more questions you ask 🙂
So many things every day makes the world wondeful for me. The sun through my window, the love of my family & friends, the cuteness of my Dwarf Hamster & Harvest Mouse. Life is wonderful, special & inspiring
Having my grandparents still with me makes my world wonderful.
My kids make me feel wonderful 🙂 my smiley bouncy little chaps make me happy everyday 🙂
my family 🙂
My Son’s Smile!
The unexplained makes me think what a wonderful world we live in. It reaffirms how insignificant yet important we are the the universe.
When a stranger shares a smile – makes life wonderful
Getting up each dayknowing it is going to be different to the day before and the day before that and that it will be full of surprises!
Just waking up and making the most of the day is what’s wonderful to me.
A random smile of a stranger
Salt & Vinegar crisps.
Lots of things: the smile on my son’s face, the breeze on my face, my cat snuggling up to me…
Diverse scenery & animals
My family all of them are wonderful to me. xx
Beautiful sunsets and amazing views make my world wonderful.
spending time with my family and my dogs!!
The thing that makes my world the most wonderful is the random chatter of my 3.5 year old. Today she asked why bats like to hang upside down (we hadn’t even been talking about bats!) my two girls just make me smile everyday and make everything in my world wonderful. Seeing the world through their eyes makes each day with them magical.
My family’s love and friendship makes the world a wonderful place for me.
Family and friends and going out and enjoying what life has to offer.
making a positive impact
Thank you so much for this fantastic post & giveaway! In response to your interesting question, what makes the world wonderful to me…is the natural beauty of nature all around me.
I live in the countryside (Surrey Hills) and i simply love waking up with the rising dawn and listning to birdsong & Phesants. The rolling green hills and woodland, which i explore either on foot with Dogs or horseback (in the saddle) is breathtaking.
Email ~ *removed from plain site by editor – is safely stored.
What makes the world wonderful is it’s outstanding natural scenery, even at home. You don’t have to go too far to experience it
The things you can’t buy -such as kindness, humour, generosity and love
Family and the wonders of the nature
What makes the world wonderful to me is that I could have had a bad or painful day and then my daughter comes home from school and with a smile all the negativity can be forgotten.
My baby! :}
My family
My family and helping others 🙂
receiving genuine kind words and hugs when things are tough! xxxx
being able to enjoy all the natural beauty surrounding us makes this a wonderful world for me
The smiles off both my daughters every day. x
The greeting I get from my dog when I get home! 🙂
Geese flying over my house in perfect formation
My wonderful friends
The beach and marine life, such indescribable beauty.
I have an endless fascination with it !
Marks and Spensers food hall
My family, and random acts of kindness by complete strangers
my family
seeing my kids sleeping is a wonderful world to me , peace quiet and being able to sit and watch them 🙂
When my children smile, laugh, play and when they say hello dad, we love you, thats what makes my world wonderful
It’s diversity and beauty in nature & people from the Antartic to the South Pacific etcetera
My husband and my dog 🙂
my family of course and the smell of fresh sea air
Happy conversations with friends, laughter, My husbands touch and my dog’s toothy grin and waggy tail.
If you had asked me that 2 years ago I would have struggled just to come up with one thing as there are so many amazing delights in the world…but that answer is easy now…my gorgeous, cheeky wee son especially since we were told we couldn’t have children beforehand!!! He was born on 5th November and is definitely my Firework.
Chocolate (and family and friends of course =)