I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot from School

by Caroline Taggart

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This small but mighty collection will trigger your memory with fun facts you learned in school-from adverbs to the Pythagorean Theorem. Witty, engaging, entertaining-a book you'll pick up again and again.

Author Caroline Taggart discovered two things while researching this book and talking with other people: One, everybody had been to school. And two, they had all forgotten entirely different things. Contained in this handy little book are the facts that you learned in school, but may not show more remember completely or accurately. Covering a variety of subjects, this book features all the most important theories, equations, phrases, and rules we were all taught years ago.

Rediscover:


  • History: The first president to occupy the White House was John Adams in 1800
  • Religion: The seven deadly sins and the names of the twelve apostles
  • Literature: In which Shakespearean play "The quality of mercy" speech appears
  • Science: The periodic table of elements devised by a Russian chemist in 1889 includes the symbol for lead (Pb), silver (Ag), tin (Sn), and gold (Au)
  • Nature: How photosynthesis works

    The information-presented in easy-to-retain, bite-sized chunks-is accurate and up-to- date. It will touch a chord with anyone old enough to have forgotten half of what they learned at school. Here is a perfect gift for every perennial student.
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Member Reviews

9 reviews
Unfortunately it got rather boring for me in the chemistry section as I had advanced courses in Chemistry in school. The physics and biology part were interesting.
All in all it was rather superficial (which wasn't so surprising given the length of the book and the complexity and vastness of topics to cover).
The premise of the book is that we all learn a wealth of information in school, but forget a great deal of it, because it doesn't pertain to our everyday life. This book promises to refresh our memories of generally known subjects of information, that are probably familiar to us, but the details are lost in the recesses of time. As such, the book is divided in sections according to subject matter, such as reading or math. The most common areas of school study are utilized, followed by a final chapter that collects bits of knowledge from a variety of the elective type studies, the fine arts and mythology and the planets and so on.

As the introduction indicates, I did find that I knew much of the material covered or had studied it at some show more point. If I could, I would be a perpetual student - too bad no one actually pays me for that - so I rather enjoy reading scholastic material, even a book like this that doesn't go deep, it just skims the surface of stuff you should know. Perhaps the best use for the book, though, is for a bit of fun trivia quizzing amongst friends, or to relieve boredom on road trips. Indeed, we did use it for that latter purpose. There's nothing special about this book, but it does make you feel a touch smarter, and can offer entertaining quizzing games with creative application. show less
The information-presented in easy-to-retain, bite-sized chunks-is accurate and up-to- date. It will touch a chord with anyone old enough to have forgotten half of what they learned at school. Here is a perfect gift for every perennial student.

This is a very informative fun book that brought back to mind things I'd long forgotten. It is a great book to have sitting on your desk for reference. I plan to frequently read random chapters of this book just to give my brain a workout.
Hardly anything new here. Can't see how in today's modern age that you would need it as a reference as anything said is very easily obtained with 2 clicks.
More a small collection of answers to pub trivia questions than a serious reference. Most of the contents I never learned at school but afterwards. The book seems to focus on the US and Europe.
½
I'm not sure what the author was trying to achieve. It is too lightweight to be a reference book, nor did it make me nostaligic about my school days.
I Used to Know That is a fun and interesting book with many tidbits of information that can be used for a quick reference guide or to brush up a little on the major subjects of Math, Literature, English, Science, History, Geography, and General Studies.

Authors of classic literature, fractions, geometry, algebra, the skeletal system, periodic table, U.S. presidents, countries and their capitals, and planets are just a few of the topics covered in this jammed packed little book.

This is an entertaining book for those interested in trivia. It would also be good for quizzing school-aged children or to just remember facts that haven’t been needed for a few years.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot from School
Epigraph
I've a grand memory for forgetting. - Robert Louis Stevension
Dedication
For Jon and Nic, who are old enough to start forgetting this sort of stuff, and for Mishak and Camille, who are just beginning to learn it.
First words
Introduction: When I started to write this book, I realized that I did remember lots of different things, but I didn't always remember those facts completely, or necessarily accurately.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)So there are now officially eight major planets--the first eight on the original list--with Pluto and Eris demoted to the status of minor planets or ice dwarfs.

Classifications

Genres
Reference, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
031.02Computer science, information & general worksEncyclopedias & books of factsGuiness Records, Ripley's Believe It or NotMiscellanies and Factbooks
LCC
AG105 .T14General WorksDictionaries and other general reference worksDictionaries and other general reference works
BISAC

Statistics

Members
722
Popularity
39,087
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.27)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
12
UPCs
2
ASINs
4